Understanding MINOCA
What is MINOCA?
MINOCA stands for Myocardial Infarction with Non-Obstructive Coronary Arteries. It refers to a heart attack (MI) where tests show damage to the heart muscle, but the coronary arteries have less than 50% narrowing — meaning no significant blockage to explain the event.
MINOCA is a syndrome, not a single disease — it has many possible underlying causes.
Who Gets MINOCA?
More common in women (about 2–3 times more likely than in men)
Seen in people with or without traditional risk factors
Often occurs at younger ages than typical heart attacks
Accounts for about 6–8% of all heart attacks
What Causes MINOCA?
Several mechanisms can injure the heart muscle without a big blockage:
Coronary vasospasm — sudden artery narrowing
Coronary microvascular dysfunction — small vessels not supplying enough blood
Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) — tear in artery wall
Clot or embolus that dissolves before testing
Stress-induced heart failure (Takotsubo syndrome)
Other rare or unknown mechanisms
Symptoms of MINOCA
How is MINOCA Diagnosed?
Cardiac MRI
Intravascular imaging (OCT or IVUS)
Tests for vasospasm or clotting disorders
How is MINOCA Treated?
General Measures
Antiplatelet medications (aspirin, sometimes clopidogrel)
Statins to improve vessel health
Beta-blockers or ACE inhibitors if appropriate
Lifestyle changes: stop smoking, heart-healthy diet, exercise, stress management
Cause-Specific Treatments
Vasospasm → calcium channel blockers & nitrates
SCAD → conservative care & careful monitoring
Takotsubo → heart failure management
Takeaway
MINOCA is a real heart attack, even when coronary arteries appear normal on angiography. Because MINOCA has multiple possible causes, careful evaluation is essential to guide the right treatment. If you have experienced symptoms or a prior diagnosis of MINOCA, schedule an appointment with Insight Heart Health for a comprehensive assessment.