Background: One out of 5 patients undergoing coronary angiography has angiographically normal coronary arteries (ANCA). Some of them have abnormally slow coronary flow (SCF). The prevalence and causes of SCF in these patients are not clear.
Methods: We studied 114 consecutive patients with ANCA. Each angiogram was independently evaluated by 2 physicians unaware of all other clinical features of the case. Coronary flow (CF) was graded using the corrected TIMI Frame Count (cTFC) and Coronary Clearance Frame Count (CCFC) methodologies. SCF was defined as a cTFC exceeding the reported normal (mean cTFC + 2 SD) in each of the three major coronary arteries. The association between SCF and various clinical, inflammatory, and metabolic variables was tested using a multivariable analysis model.
Results: Thirty-nine (34%) patients had SCF. Inter-individual CF varied substantially among them (range 10-143 frames/sec, mean: 37 ± 22 frames/sec). The intra-individual CF did not vary: CF correlated well in the three major epicardial coronary arteries of a given individual (r = 0.7, p = 0.0001). Multivariable analysis revealed that current smoking was the most significant variable related to SCF (odds ratio = 4.7, p = 0.006, CI 95% 1.6-13.3). The SCF group included significantly more smokers (41% versus 15%, p = 0.002).
Conclusions: SCF is a common finding (34%) among patients with angiographically normal coronary arteries. In these patients, slow flow is a systemic phenomenon that involves all three coronary arteries rather than a local event and is associated with current smoking.