Camacho Freire, Santiago JesúsGómez Menchero, Antonio EnriqueRoa Garrido, JessicaLeón Jiménez, JavierCardenal Piris, RosaDíaz Fernández, José Francisco2023-01-252023-01-252017-12-19http://hdl.handle.net/10668/11948Spontaneous coronary artery dissection is a rare condition, and diagnosis and treatment are challenging among patients who present with acute coronary syndrome. Typically, the condition affects young females who have no underlying atherosclerotic disease. To date, few cases of bioresorbable scaffold implantation for the treatment of spontaneous coronary artery dissection have been reported. Therefore, we describe the cases of 4 patients whom we treated with scaffolds. We evaluated the long-term results by using intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomographic scanning.enAbsorbable implantsaneurysm, dissecting/diagnosisblood vessel prosthesiscoronary vessels/diagnostic imaging/pathologymultimodal imaging/methodspercutaneous coronary intervention/instrumentationrupture, spontaneoustissue scaffoldstreatment outcomevascular diseases/therapyAbsorbable ImplantsCoronary AngiographyCoronary Vessel AnomaliesCoronary VesselsFemaleFollow-Up StudiesHumansMiddle AgedPercutaneous Coronary InterventionProsthesis DesignTime FactorsTissue ScaffoldsTomography, Optical CoherenceVascular DiseasesBioresorbable Scaffolds in Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection: Long-Term Follow-Up in 4 Patients.research article29276441open access10.14503/THIJ-16-60591526-6702PMC5737153https://doi.org/10.14503/thij-16-6059https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5737153/pdf