Table 1.
Patients characteristics.
Fig 1.
A flow diagram of patient selection.
KD indicates Kawasaki disease.
Fig 2.
OCT findings in coronary artery lesions.
NS indicates normal coronary segment; RAN, regressed aneurysm; PAN, persistent aneurysm; LS, localized stenosis; and SSR, superficial signal-rich regions with attenuation.
Fig 3.
Representative imaging findings.
Representative OCT images in no coronary lesions form the onset of disease (A4, A5, B5), regressed aneurysm segments (A1-3) and persistent aneurysm segments (B1-4) from 2 patients long after KD (A, patient 11; B, patient 5).
Fig 4.
Representative imaging findings.
Representative OCT and MDCT images in regressed aneurysm segments (A1-4), persistent aneurysm segments (B1-4) and from 2 patients long after KD (A, patient 8; B, patient 3).
Fig 5.
Representative imaging findings.
Representative OCT and MDCT images in regressed aneurysm segments (A1-5, B5, B6) and persistent aneurysm segments (B1-4) from 2 patients long after KD (A, patient 9; B, patient 11).
Fig 6.
Representative imaging findings.
Representative OCT and MDCT images in persistent aneurysm. segments (A5, B6) and localized stenosis segments (A1-4, B1-5) from a female patient without risk factor (patient 7).
Fig 7.
Plaque composition in various coronary lesions with no thrombi or ruptured plaque and in lesions with thrombi or rupture plaque.
FA indicates fibroatheroma; FC, fibrocalcific plaque; MC, microvessels; and SSR, superficial signal-rich regions with attenuation.
Table 2.
Comparison of diagnostic accuracy of CAG-derived advanced luminal findings and CT-derived calcified plaque for detection of OCT findings.