Abstract

BackgroundWomen with signs and symptoms of ischemia and no obstructive coronary artery disease often have coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD) with reduced coronary flow reserve (CFR), and compensatory coronary remodeling. Angiographic measurements of epicardial coronary anatomy (AMCA) may improve understanding of relations between CFR and atherosclerosis. We investigated AMCA and CFR in women evaluated for CMD. MethodsWomen consecutively enrolled in the Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation CVD Continuation (NCT00832702) were included. All underwent clinically indicated coronary function testing measuring CFR. AMCA included coronary angiographic atheroma burden (AB), percent diameter stenosis (PDS), and tapering reference diameter Z score (RDZ), derived for the left main and left anterior descending coronary epicardial segments. ResultsThe 51 women were aged 55.8 ± 10.8 years, with 19(38%) hypertensive, 10(20.4%) hyperlipidemic, 4(7.8%) diabetic, 13(25.5%) prior smokers, and mean CFR 3.0 ± 0.8. Both average and maximal AB negatively correlated with CFR (r = −0.30 and −0.31, with p = 0.04 for both), as did average and maximal PDS (r = −0.38 and −0.41 with p = 0.009 and p = 0.005) while average RDZ was directly related (r = 0.37, p = 0.01). Multiple linear regression analyses revealed that both average PDS (Units of CFR −0.03 95% CI: −0.06, −0.002, p = 0.023) and maximal PDS (−0.04 95% CI −0.07, −0.01, p = 0.007) were negatively related to CFR. ConclusionsMeasures of epicardial coronary atheroma burden, size and tapering are related to CFR, suggesting that atherosclerotic anatomical findings may contribute to or be a consequence of CMD, with further work is needed to investigate these measures as treatment targets.

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