SAGE Open Medical Case Reports (Aug 2017)

Unique angiographic findings in a patient with myocardial ischemia and immunoglobulin G4-related disease

  • Yusuke Kanzaki,
  • Takashi Miura,
  • Naoto Hashizume,
  • Tatsuya Saigusa,
  • Soichiro Ebisawa,
  • Koichiro Kuwahara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2050313X17728010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Immunoglobulin G4-related disease characteristically involves multiple organs including the heart and coronary arteries. Immunoglobulin G4-related coronary artery disease is thought to be due to periarteritis and histopathologically is characterized by marked thickening of the adventitia and periarterial fat with infiltration of immunoglobulin G4-positive plasma cells. Although comprehensive diagnostic criteria require a biopsy for a definite or probable diagnosis of immunoglobulin G4-related disease, obtaining a coronary artery biopsy is difficult and risky. However, imaging findings including coronary angiography and intravascular ultrasound might be useful tools to establish a diagnosis of immunoglobulin G4-related coronary artery disease. We report a case of a 63-year-old man with a history of immunoglobulin G4-related disease who presented with exertional chest pain. We found unique angiographic and intravascular ultrasound features of immunoglobulin G4-related coronary artery disease that distinguished it from those of arteriosclerotic coronary artery disease and suggest that coronary angiography and intravascular ultrasound might be useful tools in the diagnosis of immunoglobulin G4-related coronary artery disease.