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Although coronary artery dissections are rare overall (0.1–0.3% incidence in angiographic series), when they do occur it is usually within the settings of the pregnant or peripartum state, blunt chest trauma, iatrogenesis, or severe exertion or stress, or associated with one of several medical conditions (see Etiologies and Associations).
Coronary artery dissections may be single or multiple and may involve all three coronary arteries and the left main stem coronary artery.
Repeated angiography may reveal regression or healing, although progression has been described, as has recurrence, and conventional catheter-based angiography may initiate coronary artery dissection.
Some coronary artery dissections, usually iatrogenic ones, may propagate retrograde back into the aortic root. Most spontaneous coronary artery dissections remain within the coronary tree.
Hormone-associated
Oral contraception–related
Pregnancy-associated
Mid-term
Third trimester
Twin pregnancy
Peri-/postpartum–associated
Post-abortion
Menstruation-associated
Postmenopausal
Nonhormone-associated
Iatrogenic
Coronary angiography
Percutaneous coronary intervention
Plain old balloon angioplasty (POBA)
Coronary artery stenting (bare metal; drug-eluting)
Cutting balloon
Intracoronary radiation
Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)
Cryoablation for atrial fibrillation
Coronary artery bypass grafting
Drug abuse–associated
Cocaine abuse
Ergotamine abuse
Drug-associated
Fenfluramine
5-FU
Hypertension-associated
Retching-associated
Weight-lifting–associated
Acute aortic dissection (type A)
Acute aortic dissection, despite repair of the dissected aorta
Supravalvular aortic stenosis
Disease-associated
Active inflammatory bowel disease
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Polycystic kidney disease
Renal transplantation–associated
Anti-phospholipid antibody
Alpha-1 antitrypsin–associated
Pulmonary embolism
Vascular disease–associated
Eosinophilic monoarteritis
Fibromuscular dysplasia
Coronary ectasia
Inheritable connective tissue disorder
Marfan syndrome
Cystic medial necrosis
Exertion
Skiing at altitude
Wrestling
Exercise/athleticism/strenuous workouts
Neurofibromatosis (type 1—vasculopathy-associated)
Stress-associated
Sleep deprivation (72 hours)
Depression
Emotional stress
Sexual intercourse
Blunt chest trauma
Chest pain
Stable angina (likely due to organization/evolution of dissection into a coronary artery stenosis or occlusion)
Acute coronary syndrome
Myocardial infarction (MI)
ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI)
Non-STEMI
Transient ST elevation
Sudden death
Atrial fibrillation and tamponade due to rupture of the dissected artery
Tamponade due to rupture of the dissected artery
Aortic dissection–like
Stroke (due to coronary dissection resulting in MI)
Ischemic presentations dominate. It has been suggested that inadvertent use of thrombolytics for STEMI due to spontaneous coronary dissection may predispose the coronary dissection to extension. Arrhythmic presentations and sudden death are relatively common for this diagnosis. Rupture of the artery with tamponade has been described, as have other indirect complications or presentations. Multivascular occurrences (e.g., stroke, renovascular disease) should prompt consideration of vasculitides, including the inheritable variants and fibromuscular dysplasia.
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