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Table 1.

Patients characteristics.

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Fig 1.

A flow diagram of patient selection.

KD indicates Kawasaki disease.

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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.

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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).

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Fig 3 Expand

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).

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Fig 4 Expand

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).

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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).

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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.

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Fig 7 Expand

Table 2.

Comparison of diagnostic accuracy of CAG-derived advanced luminal findings and CT-derived calcified plaque for detection of OCT findings.

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Table 2 Expand