Predicting heart attacks

Simulating the biomechanical forces that cause fatty deposits to break off artery walls may help to foresee when heart attacks will occur.

Image of the inside of an artery, obtained through an imaging method called optical coherence tomography. Image credit: Milzi et al. (CC BY 4.0)

Heart attacks are caused by a blockage in arteries that supply oxygen to the heart. This often happens when fatty deposits (or ‘plaques’) that line blood vessels break off and create a clot. To identify individuals most at risk of this occurring, physicians currently use symptoms, family history, blood tests, imaging and surgical procedures. But better methods are needed.

Imaging blockages in the arteries of individuals who died from heart attacks highlighted certain plaque characteristics that increase the risk of a rupture. Further understanding the forces that lead to these fatty deposits breaking off may help scientists to develop improved heart attack prediction methods.

Using patient-specific computer simulations, Milzi et al. show it is possible to predict where plaques are most likely to rupture in an individual, based on biomechanical stresses on the deposits in the artery. The models also showed how forces on the external layers of the plaque played a pivotal role in breakages.

More research is needed to confirm the results of this study and to develop automated ways for measuring the stress exerted on plaques in the arteries. If that research is successful, biomechanical analyses of artery plaques in routine patient assessments may one day allow physicians to predict heart attacks and provide life-saving preventive care.