[Detection of circulating endothelial cells: a new diagnostic test of angina at rest].

Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss

Service de cardiologie A, CHU Timone, Marseille.

Published: December 1995

The diagnosis of spontaneous angina depends on the recording of per-critical electrocardiographic changes. There is no simple biological test to make its retrospective diagnosis. The attack is usually triggered by instability of an atheromatous plaque which fissures and liberates endothelial cells in the blod stream. The detection of these cells cold therefore be a biological sign of this condition. The technique of detection of circulating endothelial cells by immuno-magnetic method was used in 3 groups of patients admitted to hospital within 24 hours: group I comprised 11 patients with acute myocardial infarction, group II comprised 23 patients who had suffered from spontaneous angina with ST segment depression during the attack and significant coronary arterial stenosis, group III comprised 6 patients with chest pain for which coronary angiography is normal and provocative test of spasm is negative. Circulating endothelial cells were detected in all patients of group I (100%), in 18 of the 23 patients of group II (78%) and only in one of group III (18%). These results confer on this biological test for spontaneous angina a specificity and predictive positive value of 83 and 95% and a sensitivity and negative predictive value of 78 and 50%. Therefore the detection of circulating endothelial cells could be used as a simple and reliable test for retrospective diagnosis of spontaneous angina. The mediocre sensitivity and negative predictive value may be explained by a mechanism other than fissuration of atheromatous plaque in some cases of spontaneous angina.

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