Changes in Coronary Aneurysm Diameters After Acute Kawasaki Disease from Infancy to Adolescence

AbstractWe clarified the changes in coronary artery diameters based on the degree of coronary artery involvement immediately after acute Kawasaki disease (KD). Two hundred sixteen coronary arteries in 85 patients after KD examined by two-dimensional echocardiography were reviewed from 1995. The maximal internal diameters were measured at 2  months, 1 year, 3 years, 10 years and 15 years after KD. The coronary arteries were divided into five groups based on the absolute diameter at 2 months, as well as six groups based on the Z score at 2 months. The maximum diameters were compared at 2 months with those during follow-up in eac h group. The numbers of right coronary, left anterior descending, left coronary, and left circumflex arteries were 84, 73, 55 and 4, respectively. There was a significant relationship between the maximum internal diameter at 2 months and subsequent changes in the maximum diameters after KD in the l ate period in both groups (p <  0.0001). The maximum diameters of coronary artery aneurysms (CAAs) ≥ 8.0 mm at 2 months did not change significantly after 1 year, however, the maximum diameter of CAAs <  8.0 mm was significantly smaller in the late period (p <  0.05). Coronary arteries without dilatation at 2 months after KD grew normally. CAAs with a maximum diameter ≥ 6.0 mm andZ score  ≥ 7.5 at 2 months after KD persisted in adolescents, whereas coronary arteries with diameters <  6.0 mm andZ s...
Source: Pediatric Cardiology - Category: Cardiology Source Type: research