Coronary Artery Embolism and Myocardial Infarction
A Clinicopathologic Study of 55 Patients
- KATE ROTHKO PRIZEL, B.S.;
- GROVER M. HUTCHINS, M.D.; and
- BERNADINE H. BULKLEY, M.D.
Abstract
Although coronary artery embolism is a recognized entity, there is little morphologic information indicating it is a cause of myocardial infarction. We studied patients with coronary artery embolic infarcts, which comprised 13% of our autopsy-studied infarcts. Underlying diseases predisposing to coronary emboli included valvular heart disease (40%), myocardiopathy (29%), coronary atherosclerosis (16%), and chronic atrial fibrillation (24%). Mural thrombi were present in 18 (33%). Myocardial infarction, clinically diagnosed in 15 (27%) patients, caused death in 11 (20%). Most emboli involved the left coronary artery and lodged distally, causing infarcts that were usually transmural. Because of their distal location and recanalization, coronary emboli may be a cause of infarcts with angiographically normal coronaries. Thus, coronary emboli are not rare, may produce signs and symptoms indistinguishable from atherosclerotic coronary disease, and by lodging distally in coronary arteries that are usually previously normal, they most often cause small but transmural myocardial infarction.
Article and Author Information
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▸From the Cardiovascular Division, Department of Medicine, and the Department of Pathology, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions; Baltimore, Maryland.
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▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Bernadine H. Bulkley, M.D.; Department of Pathology, The Johns Hopkins Hospital; Baltimore, MD 21205.
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- Received June 16, 1977.
- Accepted September 27, 1977.
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