AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined differences in coronary atherosclerosis between men and women, focusing on anatomical features and the role of endothelial shear stress (ESS) in plaque growth.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 1,183 coronary arteries, using ultrasound technology to assess characteristics and changes in plaque over a 6-10 month period.
  • Findings revealed that while women's coronary arteries and plaques were smaller, the rate of plaque progression and ESS were similar between genders; however, younger women exhibited a notably higher rate of plaque growth compared to younger men, indicating that age influences atherosclerosis differently across genders.

Article Abstract

Background And Aims: Clinical atherosclerosis manifestations are different in women compared to men. Since endothelial shear stress (ESS) is known to play a critical role in coronary atherosclerosis development, we investigated differences in anatomical characteristics and endothelial shear stress (ESS)-related plaque growth in human coronary arteries in men compared to women.

Methods: 1183 coronary arteries (male/female: 944/239) from the PREDICTION study were studied for differences in artery/plaque and ESS characteristics, and ESS-related plaque progression (6-10 months follow-up) among men and women and after stratification for age. All characteristics were derived from IVUS-based vascular profiling and reported per 3 mm-segments (13,030 3-mm-segments (male/female: 10,465/2,565)).

Results: Coronary arteries and plaques were significantly smaller in females compared to males; but no important differences were observed in plaque burden, ESS and rate of plaque progression. Change in plaque burden was inversely related to ESS (p<0.001) with no difference between women versus men (β: -0.62 ± 0.13 vs -0.68 ± 0.05, p=0.62). However, stratification for age demonstrated that ESS-related plaque growth was more marked in young women compared to men (<55 years, β: -2.02 ± 0.61 vs -0.33 ± 0.10, p=0.007), reducing in magnitude over the age-categories up till 75 years.

Conclusions: Coronary artery and plaque size are smaller in women compared to men, but ESS and ESS- related plaque progression were similar. Sex-related differences in ESS-related plaque growth were evident after stratification for age. These observations suggest that although the fundamental processes of atherosclerosis progression are similar in men versus women, plaque progression may be influenced by age within gender.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2021.12.013DOI Listing

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