Imagine having a heart scan that looks mostly fine, yet hiding a small risk. This study looked at over 4,500 patients who had no history of heart disease but showed mild calcium on their scans. Most of these patients had normal blood flow during stress tests, suggesting their hearts were pumping well. However, the location of that calcium mattered a lot.
Coronary Artery Disease is when the arteries that feed your heart get blocked. Myocardial Perfusion Imaging is a scan that checks if blood is flowing properly to your heart muscle. When researchers found calcium near the main entrance of these arteries, the results were concerning. Patients with this specific calcium pattern had a 24% higher risk of major heart events and a 25% higher risk of dying from any cause.
During the study, which followed people for an average of 3.6 years, 599 people experienced major heart events and 444 passed away. The calcium near the main artery entrance acted like a warning sign. Yet, we must be careful. This was an observational study, meaning researchers watched what happened without changing anything. We know the calcium location is linked to bad outcomes, but we do not yet know if it causes them.
This research helps doctors see that not all calcium is the same. Finding calcium near the main artery entrance in patients with otherwise mild buildup and normal scans identifies a group that needs extra attention. However, this study does not prove that the calcium itself causes the problems, nor does it tell us exactly how to treat these patients yet.