Skip to main content
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 May 30.
Published in final edited form as: AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2013 May;200(5):W450–W457. doi: 10.2214/AJR.12.8934

Table 3.

Detailed Characteristics of Patients with Acute Coronary Syndrome

Patient No. Age (y) Sex Symptoms Time From Last Symptoms to Cardiac CT Scan (h) Peak Troponin I Level (mg/dL) Cardiac CT Coronary Stenosis Findings Diagnosis Perfusion Defect

1 58 Female Chest and back pain 0.4 64.0 Left circumflex (mid, 80%) Myocardial infarction Inferolateral
2 63 Male Chest pain 3 47.1 Right coronary artery (ostial, 70%; mid, 90%; distal, 70%); left anterior descending (proximal, 50%); ramus (ostial, 40%) Myocardial infarction None
3 68 Male Chest pain 2 3.4 Obtuse marginal (mid, 99%) Myocardial infarction Inferolateral
4 62 Male Chest pain, dyspnea 2 1.2 Left anterior descending (mid, 100%); left circumflex (mid, 70%); posterior descending artery (ostial, 80%) Myocardial infarction None
5 67 Female Chest pain 6 0.07 Left anterior descending (proximal, 80%); right coronary artery (proximal, 50%) Unstable angina Anterior
6 68 Male Chest pain 2 0.09 Left anterior descending (proximal, 70%, mid, 100%); left circumflex (mid, 80%); right coronary artery (proximal, 70%) Unstable angina None
7 59 Female Chest pain 17 0 Obtuse marginal (mid, 80%) Unstable angina None
8 87 Male Chest pain 2 0.02 Left main (90%); left anterior descending (distal, 60%; obtuse marginal, 70%); right coronary artery (proximal, 75%) Unstable angina None
9 61 Male Chest pain 2 0.09 Left main (40%); right coronary artery (mid, 95%; distal, 50%) Unstable angina None