In the last 15 years, intense interest has focused on various interventional pharmacologic and mechanical forms of therapy for the treatment of atherosclerosis coronary artery disease. Many techniques and devices (dilating balloons, perfusion catheters, thermal probes and balloons, lasers, atherectomy devices, stents, intravascular ultrasound) have been used or are under study for future use. Many of these techniques and devices require an understanding of histologic and pathologic features of the coronary arteries and diseases which affect them. This article reviews selective areas of anatomy, histology, and pathology relevant to the use of various new interventional techniques. Part IV of this review will focus on congenital coronary artery anomalies Myocardial bridges, coronary aneurysm, emboli, and dissection and clinical implications regarding echocardiographic imaging techniques. Copyright © 1992 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Waller, B. F., Orr, C. M., Slack, J. D., Pinkerton, C. A., Tassel, J. V., Peters, T., & Waller, B. (1992). Anatomy, histology, and pathology of coronary arteries: A review relevant to new interventional and imaging techniques‐part iv. Clinical Cardiology, 15(9), 675–687. https://doi.org/10.1002/clc.4960150911
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