Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2921148 Heart, Lung and Circulation 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo describe the clinical features, natural history and response to treatment of coronary vasospasm associated with eosinophilia.MethodsTwo patients with eosinophilia who had recurrent acute coronary events due to multi-vessel coronary artery spasm are described. The clinical presentation and outcomes of these 2 patients and 17 additional cases of eosinophilia and coronary artery vasospasm identified on a systematic literature review are presented.ResultsPatients were usually admitted because of repeated episodes of angina at rest and raised plasma markers of myocyte necrosis. Dynamic ST elevation was observed in 15 (83%) patients. Coronary angiography was performed in all patients. Spontaneous (n = 7) or provoked (n = 8) coronary artery spasm, which was usually multi-focal, was observed in 15 (83%) patients. Symptoms often continued despite high dose vasodilators but responded well to prednisone. Recurrent coronary events were frequent, and included sudden death (n = 4), resuscitated cardiac arrest (n = 2), myocardial infarction (n = 10) and unstable angina (n = 11). Recurrent events were more frequent when not taking compared to when taking prednisone (4.2 versus 0.4 events/year, p = 0.002, hazard ratio 11, 95% confidence interval 2.4–50).ConclusionPublished case reports suggest that coronary vasospasm associated with eosinophilia responds poorly to conventional vasodilator treatment and the risk of recurrent coronary events is high. Most patients respond to treatment which suppresses the eosinophilia.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Authors
, , , ,