15th December 2009 California USA : A new tool may help clinicians distinguish cardiac emergencies requiring immediate surgical intervention from chronic problems that can be treated with diet and medication.
Angiograms, images made by catheters inserted into the arteries feeding the heart, offer an inside view of the interior surface (“lumen”) of these blood vessels, often revealing deposits of a dangerous fatty substance called plaque.
But plaque comes in different forms. Some are metabolically stable and firmly fixed in the lumen and treatable with diet, exercise, and medication.
Others are less viscous and likely high risks to dislodge and cause heart attacks. These require immediate primary coronary intervention (angioplasty) or by-pass surgery
The problem, says Tzung John Hsiai, associate professor of biomedical engineering and cardiovascular medicine at the Univ. of Southern California, is that current angiogram techniques cannot distinguish the types.
“Distinguishing stable from unstable plaque remains an unmet clinical challenge.”
He hopes that the new Microelectromechanical System (MEMS) sensor his lab has created can change this situation. The MEMS system uses minute heat perturbations as a proxy for blood flow and detects changes in bulk resistance for plaque characteristics.
The lab has demonstrated that this sensor can make the distinction between stable and unstable plaque in laboratory examinations of specimens of plaque clogged arteries extracted from rabbits fed a special plaque-producing diet.
Another configuration of the same sensors can measure the forces on the artery walls produced by blood flows, identifying spots where back currents may be promoting plaque formation.
The next step will be to embed the MEMS sensors into angiogram catheters, and show that they can accurately make the same distinctions, first in animals, then in human subjects.
Every year, approximately one million Americans undergo angiograms, according to the National Institutes of Health.
Heart attacks are the leading cause of deaths in the U.S., accounting for approximately one-fifth of total annual mortality according to the American Heart Association.
And “coronary artery disease is rising worldwide because of changes in diet in developing nations, and parallel increases in obesity and diabetes in the West,” says Hsiai. Hsiai’s lab recently received a funding in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds from the National Institutes of Health to pursue the research