PROFIL EPIDEMIOLOGIQUE DE L’INFARCTUS DU MYOCARDE SANS STENOSE SIGNIFICATIVE DES ARTERES CORONAIRES MINOCA
PROFIL EPIDEMIOLOGIQUE DE L’INFARCTUS DU MYOCARDE SANS STENOSE SIGNIFICATIVE DES ARTERES CORONAIRES MINOCA
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Date
2022-06-01
Authors
Docteur MOUSSAOUI Fethi
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Abstract
Background:
Myocardial infarction with with non-obstructive coronary arteries (MINOCA) remains a
puzzling clinical entity characterized by clinical evidence of myocardial infarction (MI) with
normal or near-normal coronary arteries on angiography (stenosis <50 %).
This pathology is poorly understood, several studies are underway for a better understanding of
this disease. The aim of our work was to review the literature and assess the epidemiology,
clinical features, prognosis and etiologies of MINOCA.
Methods
Descriptive, prospective study, spread over a period of 36 months from January 2018 to
December 2020 involving a total number of 585 patients undergoing coronary angiography at
the cardiology department of CHU Tlemcen, for a reason for acute myocardial ischemia.
We defined the patients as having acute myocardial ischemia with obstructive coronary artery
disease (IMA-CO) if there was revascularization or plaque ≥ 50% and as having MINOCA if
there was <50% obstruction or a mechanism without plaque. Patients who received
thrombolytics before angiography were excluded.
We studied the epidemiological, clinical and prognostic profile of the MINOCA population
then compared them to patients with obstructive coronary artery disease and finally we
established an etiological analysis of the MINOCA population.
Results
The number of MINOCA cases in our sample of 585 AMI patients was 10.25% vs. 525 (89.74%)
cases of AMI-CO, it was more common in men (78.3% vs. 21 , 7%; odds ratio at 3.61) and in the
youngest patients.
MINOCA patients were more likely to be without traditional cardiac risk factors (7.9% vs. 2.1%;
P <0.001) but more predisposed to non-traditional risk factors than AMI-CO patients (3.7% against
1.8%; P = 0.026). Smoking is the only traditional risk factor frequent in the MINOCA population
versus IMA-CO (P at 0.001).
Depression, stress, drug addiction, DVT history and autoimmune disease history are more
frequent in the MINOCA population versus IMA-CO (P <0.05)
STEMI are more found in the MINOCA population versus IMA-CO (P = 0.000)
In terms of prognosis, the MINOCA population had a better prognosis: less risk of recurrence
than the IMA-CO population 6.7% versus 10.45% (P = 0.03) also less mortality 0% versus 4.6%
(P = 0.007).
Conclusion:
The patients with MINOCA were more men, smokers, depressed, stressed, drug addicts with
hypercoagulable states compared to patients with obstructive coronary artery disease (IMA CO) however they had a better quality of life and a good prognosis.