Abstract
Background: We determined the prevalence, morphology, and severity of coronary artery plaque in high-risk patients via 64-slice cardiovascular computed tomography (CVCT). Methods: Based on chart review, 101 subjects having a 64-slice CVCTwere assigned to one of three groups: type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, or comparison. Disease severity was classified as:no disease, subclinical disease (lesions <70%), or clinically significant disease (lesions >70%). Plaque morphology wasstratified as either vulnerable or stable plaque by Houndsfield units and established American Heart Association criteria.Results: Diabetic subjects had the highest prevalence of CAD (78%), compared to 65% in the metabolic syndrome subjectsand 55% in the comparison group (p<.05). Diabetic subjects were also most likely to have both significant CAD (41%), andstable plaque (52%) followed by metabolic syndrome subjects (33% and 25%) and the comparison group (15% and 20%) (p< 0.05). The metabolic syndrome group was most likely to have vulnerable lesions (36%) potentially placing them atincreased risk of acute events. 22% of subjects in the diabetes group, 35% in the metabolic syndrome group, and 45% in thecomparison cohort were disease-free. Conclusions: 64-slice CVCT allows non-invasive diagnosis and stratification ofsubjects with diabetes and the metabolic syndrome, providing relevant information regarding coronary disease prevalence,severity, and plaque composition, that are statistically different among these high risk patient cohorts. (Int J Diabetes Metab14: 120-125, 2006)
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