Congenital coronary artery anomalies angiographic classification revisited.

Int J Cardiovasc Imaging

EndoCardio Vascular Therapy Research, Department of Specialistic Medicine, Mater Salutis Legnago General Hospital, Legnago, Verona, Italy.

Published: October 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study proposes a simplified angiographic classification for congenital coronary artery anomalies (CAAs), focusing on several common angiographic patterns to aid angiographers.
  • The authors reviewed 5100 coronary angiographies and identified 62 patients with CAAs, categorizing anomalies into seven distinct classes based on certain features.
  • Three independent observers successfully classified the CAAs into the established classes with no disagreements, indicating the classification's effectiveness for clear and quick identification of these anomalies.

Article Abstract

Many fragmental classification of coronary artery anomalies (CAAs) exist, but a simple practical angiographic classification for angiographers has been never proposed. This study is aimed to suggest a simplified angiographic classification of congenital CAAs based on just a few univocal common angiographic patterns. The authors reviewed 5100 coronary angiographies in order to select CAAs patients and identify simple common angiographic features. Sixty-two patients (1.21%, female/male 20/42, mean age 65.3 +/- 10.6 years) had CAA on coronary angiography. The authors identified seven classes for seven angiographic patterns: I--hypoplasia/atresia, II--hyperdominance, III--fistula, IV--originating from wrong sinus, V--originating from other arteries, VI--splitting, and VII--tunnelling. A, P, B, R, L, PA, AO refer to anterior, posterior or passage between the aorta and pulmonary artery and to right, left, pulmonary artery and aorta. Three blind observers were be able to categorize all the CAAs according to this classification with no inter-observer differences: 3.2% were classified as class I, 8.1% as class II, 3.2% as class III, 24.2% as class IV, 22.5% as class V, 29% as class VI, and finally 9.7% as class VII. Eleven patients (17.7%) had 'A' passage, 10 (16.1%) 'P' passage and 9 (14.5%) 'B' passage. Twelve patients (19.5%) had anomalous origin from the right sinus of Valsalva, 2 (3.2%) from the left. This simplified classification was applicable to all most significant CAAs and in the authors' view it may make for a more rapid and univocal CAA angiographic description.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/a:1025806908289DOI Listing

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