Ektasie der Koronararterien
This image
is part of a series which can be scrolled interactively with the mousewheel or mouse dragging. This is done by using Template:Imagestack. The series is found in the category Kawasaki disease coronary aneurysms - case 001. Kawasaki-Syndrom: (mäßig ausgeprägte) Aneurysmen der Koronarien bei einem 50-jährigen, der in der Kindheit an einem Kawasaki-Syndrom erkrankt war. - 3D-Rekonstruktion VR aus einem Cardio-CT-Datensatz.
Coronary arterial ectasia (CAE) refers to diffuse dilatation of the coronary arteries. Under some classification systems, there is some overlap with the term coronary arterial aneurysms (which is a more focal dilatation).
Terminology
It is often defined as dilatation of an arterial segment to a diameter at least 1.5 times (i.e. 150%) that of the adjacent normal coronary artery (unaffected segment) and involves at least 50% or more of the length of the artery .
Epidemiology
They may be present in up to ~5% (range 3-8%) of angiographic and in ~1% (range 0.2-1.4%) of autopsy series.
Pathology
Etiology
It is attributed to atherosclerosis in 50% of patients while in ~25% of patients it may be congenital in origin.
Associations
- coronary artery disease: co-exists in the great majority of patients
- inflammatory or connective tissue diseases: 10-20% cases and include
- connective tissue disorders
- purely congenital in origin in a small proportion of cases
Classification
One method of classification is :
- type I: diffuse ectasia of two or three vessels
- type II: diffuse ectasia of one vessel and localized disease in other, i.e. an aneurysm
- type III: diffuse ectasia in only one vessel
- type IV: focal coronary aneurysm in one vessel
Siehe auch:
Assoziationen und Differentialdiagnosen zu Ektasie der Koronararterien: