Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://repository.monashhealth.org/monashhealthjspui/handle/1/36645
Conference/Presentation Title: | Prevalence and Types of Anomalous Coronary Anatomy and Future Utilisation of Such Cohorts to Investigate Cause. | Authors: | White A. ;Chew A.;Malaiapan Y.;Ramialison M. | Institution: | (Chew, Malaiapan, White) Monash Heart, Monash Health, Clayton, Australia (Ramialison, White) Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute, Monash University, Clayton, Australia | Presentation/Conference Date: | 31-Jul-2019 | Copyright year: | 2019 | Publisher: | Elsevier Ltd | Publication information: | Heart Lung and Circulation. Conference: 67th Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand Annual Scientific Meeting, the International Society for Heart Research Australasian Section Annual Scientific Meeting and the 13th Annual Australia and New Zealand Endovascular Therapies Meeting. Adelaide Australia. 28 (Supplement 4) (pp S313), 2019. Date of Publication: 2019. | Abstract: | Background: The incidence of anomalous coronary anatomy is about 1%. The embryonic cause is unknown. Method(s): We searched cardiac catheterisation cases over 5 years (2013-2017) for the words "anomaly", "anomalous", "aberrant", and common spelling mistake variations. For duplicates, only a patient's earliest procedure was included. A cardiologist reviewed the report and angiogram of each potential case to confirm coronary anomaly. We excluded cases of high take-off anterior right coronary origin, separate origin of LAD and circumflex, and coronary artery fistulae, because our methodology was unlikely to detect all such cases. Result(s): The incidence was 0.8% (109 of 14295) including: (1) Circumflex origin from right cusp or as proximal branch of right coronary (n = 61, 56%), (2) Right coronary origin from left cusp (n = 36, 33%), (3) Left coronary origin from right cusp (n = 8, 7.3%), and single cases (n = 1, 0.9%) of (4) single coronary from right cusp, (5) single coronary from left cusp, (6) right, circumflex and LAD coronaries with separate ostia from right cusp, and (7) LAD origin from right cusp. There was no difference between cases and non-cases regarding age, procedure duration, screening time, height, weight or gender. Conclusion(s): 0.8% proportion with coronary anomaly is similar to previous series. The commonest anomaly is circumflex arising from the right cusp or as a branch of the right coronary. Our cohort could be leveraged to perform GWAS or whole genome sequencing to investigate genetic contributions to anomalous coronary anatomy. Genetic studies of this phenotype do not yet appear to have been conducted.Copyright © 2019 | Conference Start Date: | 2019-08-08 | Conference End Date: | 2019-08-11 | DOI: | http://monash.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2019.06.414 | ISSN: | 1443-9506 | URI: | https://repository.monashhealth.org/monashhealthjspui/handle/1/36645 | Type: | Conference Abstract |
Appears in Collections: | Conferences |
Show full item record
Items in Monash Health Research Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.