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Circulation. 2007;115:1823
doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.182499
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(Circulation. 2007;115:1823.)
© 2007 American Heart Association, Inc.

Issue Highlights


*    COMPARISON OF INTRAVASCULAR ULTRASOUND AND QUANTITATIVE CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE PROGRESSION, by Berry et al.
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The assessment of coronary artery disease severity, progression, and regression has historically been performed using quantitative coronary angiography (QCA); it is well known, however, that the degree of atherosclerotic plaque is underestimated by QCA. In contrast, intravascular ultrasound has been shown to define the plaque and its composition more accurately. It is not clear how well serial intravascular ultrasound measurements compare to serial QCA measurements. The study by Berry et al in this issue of Circulation compared intravascular ultrasound and QCA at baseline and after 24 months in 525 and 432 patients, respectively. A significant correlation was seen between baseline measures of lumen dimensions using the 2 techniques, but weak correlations between plaque volume and luminal narrowing were observed over time. Disease progression by QCA was associated with a significant increase in plaque volume on intravascular ultrasound, however. While these techniques correlate with each other, the relationship is not strong enough to consider them as equivalent. See p 1851 (editorial p 1824).


*    A PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF TRANS FATTY ACIDS IN ERYTHROCYTES AND RISK OF CORONARY HEART DISEASE, by Sun et al.
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Studies have suggested that the type of fat consumed can contribute to cardiovascular disease; specifically, intake of trans fats leads to increased vascular risk. Is it possible to measure this risk from a blood-derived marker? In the current issue of Circulation, Sun and colleagues measured trans fatty acids from erythrocytes in selected participants from the Women’s Health Study. They found that higher total trans fatty acid content in erythrocytes was associated with an elevated risk of developing coronary heart disease even after adjusting for covariates. It will be interesting to determine in future studies if modification of this marker is associated with decreased cardiovascular risk. See p 1858.


*    A RANDOMIZED, PLACEBO-CONTROLLED, DOUBLE-BLIND TRIAL OF THE EFFECT OF COMBINED THERAPY WITH DEFEROXAMINE AND DEFERIPRONE ON MYOCARDIAL IRON IN THALASSEMIA MAJOR USING CARDIOVASCULAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE, by Tanner et al.
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Recent studies have documented that cardiovascular magnetic resonance using a T2* acquisition sequence can provide an index that quantifies myocardial and hepatic iron content in patients with ß-thalassemia major, an important advance allowing for a noninvasive marker that can reflect treatment effect of chelating agents. In this issue of Circulation, Tanner et al take advantage of this technique by conducting a clinical trial that examines the effect of adding the oral iron chelator deferiprone on a group of ß-thalassemia major patients with cardiovascular magnetic resonance evidence of myocardial iron, despite standard maintenance subcutaneous deferoxamine chelation therapy. In a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled setting, the authors report that the addition of deferiprone was associated with a reduction in myocardial iron, an increase in ejection fraction, improved endothelial function, and reduction in serum ferritin. As myocardial dysfunction from iron overload in ß-thalassemia major contributes substantially to long-term morbidity and mortality in ß-thalassemia major, these data have substantial treatment implications for this challenging group of patients. See p 1876.

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*    Images in Cardiovascular Medicine
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An Unusual Case of Embolic Stroke After Permanent Pacing. See p e386.

Electron Microscopic Insights Into the Vascular Biology of Atherosclerosis: Study of Coronary Endarterectomy Specimens. See p e388.

Rib Perforation From a Right Ventricular Pacemaker Lead. See p e391.


Figure 14796
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*    Correspondence
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See p e393.


Related Articles:

A Direct Comparison of Intravascular Ultrasound and Quantitative Coronary Arteriography: Implications for Measures of Atherosclerosis as Clinical Surrogates
B. Greg Brown
Circulation 2007 115: 1824-1826. [Full Text]

An Unusual Case of Embolic Stroke After Permanent Pacing
Tim Lockie, Azad Ghuran, and David Hildick-Smith
Circulation 2007 115: e386-e387. [Full Text]

Electron Microscopic Insights Into the Vascular Biology of Atherosclerosis: Study of Coronary Endarterectomy Specimens
Komarakshi R. Balakrishnan, Sarah Kuruvilla, Aishwarya Srinivasan, and Praveen Kumar Sehgal
Circulation 2007 115: e388-e390. [Full Text]

Rib Perforation From a Right Ventricular Pacemaker Lead
Sunil Singhal, Joshua M. Cooper, Albert T. Cheung, and Michael A. Acker
Circulation 2007 115: e391-e392. [Full Text]

Letter by Xia Regarding Article, "High-Density Lipoproteins and Their Constituent, Sphingosine-1-Phosphate, Directly Protect the Heart Against Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury In Vivo via the S1P3 Lysophospholipid Receptor"
Pu Xia
Circulation 2007 115: e393. [Full Text]

A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Double-Blind Trial of the Effect of Combined Therapy With Deferoxamine and Deferiprone on Myocardial Iron in Thalassemia Major Using Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance
M.A. Tanner, R. Galanello, C. Dessi, G.C. Smith, M.A. Westwood, A. Agus, M. Roughton, R. Assomull, S.V. Nair, J.M. Walker, and D.J. Pennell
Circulation 2007 115: 1876-1884. [Abstract] [Full Text]

A Prospective Study of Trans Fatty Acids in Erythrocytes and Risk of Coronary Heart Disease
Qi Sun, Jing Ma, Hannia Campos, Susan E. Hankinson, JoAnn E. Manson, Meir J. Stampfer, Kathryn M. Rexrode, Walter C. Willett, and Frank B. Hu
Circulation 2007 115: 1858-1865. [Abstract] [Full Text]




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