Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0002962 (angina)
21,142 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We compared patients with variant angina (ST-segment elevation during pain) who had normal or near normal coronary arteriograms (Group 1) with 20 in whom variant angina occurred in the presence of obstructive coronary lesions (Group 2). A long history of nonexertional angina without angina of effort or previous infarction was the rule in Group 1, whereas recent-onset unstable angina preceded by effort angina and infarction predominated in Group 2 (P less than 0.001). Normal electrocardiograms at rest, with ischemic ST-segment elevation in the inferior leads, and ischemia-induced heart block and bradycardia, characterized Group 1, whereas abnormal electrocardiograms, ischemic involvement or fibrillation were more common in Group 2 (P less than 0.001). Variant angina with normal coronary arteriogram generally has a benign course and is probably unrelated to atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Clinical syndrome of variant angina with normal coronary arteriogram. 98 80

The clinical course and coronary arteriographic findings in eight patients with Prinzmetal's variant angina pectoris are reviewed and contrasted to previously reported cases. In six patients with S-T-elevation inferiorly, three had normal coronary arteriograms, one had complete right coronary artery occlusion, one had diffuse triple-vessel disease, and one did not undergo coronary arteriography. In two patients with S-T-elevation anteriorly, severe stenosis of the anterior descending coronary artery was present. Medical treatment in four patients and surgical revascularization of the anterior descending coronary artery in two patients were both accompanied by marked symptomatic improvement. Spontaneous loss of angina occurred in two patients. During 17 months' mean follow-up, seven patients have remained free of angina and one died suddenly. Variant angina pectoris may be accompanied by a variety of coronary arteriographic findings and the prognosis appears more favorable than previously reported.
...
PMID:Variant angina pectoris: a clinical and coronary arteriographic spectrum. 107 30

In the light of 4 personal observations of PPPRINZMETAL's angina, a review has been conducted of the literature in the 15 years since the condition was first described. Although the formal diagnostic criteria for this form of angina simultaneously clinical, biological and electrical - anginal attacks occurring at rest, often at night, during which elevation of the ST segment is recorded which disappears at the end of the attack without any significant rise in enzyme levels (SGOT and CPK) - the frontiers of the syndrome appear to have widened since PRINZMETAL's description: - Severe proximal stenosis of the coronary arteries is not obligatory; they may be only slightly damaged or even healthy. - Prinzmetal's angina is by no means always "spontaneous" but is often induced, either by psychic factors, which explain the fixed time of the attacks, or by organic factors, e.g. cold drinks (Observation No.2). In this event it would appear safer to speak of angina or rest as opposed to angina of effort. - In contrast to what PRINZMETAL thought, effort tests may sometimes induce angina-type pain with elevation of the ST segment, and here the borderline between this syndrome and conventional angina with ST segment elevation after effort test (5% of cases) is less clear-cut. The two nosologic entities probably reflect the same physiopathological situation, i.e. acute myocardial ischemia, and may represent the same affection in different phases of development. The prognosis is equally bad. - Attacks of rinzmetal's angina are often accompanied by severe and sometimes fatal disorders of rhythm, and this influences the therapeutic approach. - The coronary spasm posited by PRINZMETAL and others before the advent of coronarography is indeed, in the majority of cases, the immediate cause of myocardial ischemia and anginal pain, without any preliminary increase in the energy requirements of the heart as in the conventional anginal attack. - A vasoactive substance present in the circulating blood at the beginning of the affection, which may be degraded and subsequently disappear and may be secreted by the pathologic coronary artery, was demonstrated in observation No. 4: this may, in conjunction with vagal hypertonia, be the causative factor in coronary spasm. Study of its pharmacodynamic properties is now in progress.
...
PMID:[Prinzmetal's angor. Apropos of 4 cases. Review of the literature]. 108 Aug 80

Clinical data, EKG and coronary angiography of 187 patients with unstable angina are given. The patients are divided into 4 groups: spontancous angina, spontaneous angina Prinzmetal's variant, "in crescendo" agina, intermediate syndrome. 103 patients were treated with pharmacological therapy only and 84 underwent aortocoronary bypass; 2 of them were operated on for acute myocardial infarction. The clinical and pathologic peculiarities of two groups are not similar and therefore the results are not comparable. There was a mortality rate of 10.3% of patients with pharmacological treatment and the incidence of non fatal myocardial infarction was 10.4%. The mortality during operation was 14.2% and the incidence of non fatal myocardial infarction was 13.1%. The spontaneous angina and Prinzmetal's variant often had normal rest EKG and a very similar coronary angiographic pattern, with obstructive lesions often localized in the proximal part of a single vessel. In 9% of cases coronary arteries were normal. The incidence of serious arrhythmias was higher in Prinzmetal's variant than in other types of unstable angina. The mortality in patients with Prinzmetal's angina was particularly high during the first period of experience (1970-1973) when the operation was performed after a few days of unsatisfactory results with pharmacological treatment; it decreased after patients underwent operation in an attenuate phase of the disease. The rest EKG of "in crescendo" angina was almost always pathologic; these cases presented obstructive lesions of 2 or 3 coronary arteries, functional impairment of left ventricle, collateral circulation. The mortality in patients treated with pharmacological therapy was higher than in other types of unstable angina. The mortality during operation, fairly high in the first period of experience, decreased in this group of patients as well, during the second period of experience.
...
PMID:[Unstable angina: observtions on 187 patients of whom 84 were operated on for aorto-coronary bypass (author's transl)]. 108 49

Ffity-five patients with recurrent severe angina pectoris at rest that was resistant to medical therapy were treated with intraaortic balloon pumping (IABP), angiography, and vein bypass surgery. There were 25 patients with typical angina with ST depression during pain, 12 with Prinzmetal's angina, and 18 patients with angina in the early recovery phase following "transmural" myocardial infarction. The severity and frequency of ischemic attacks were documented with hemodynamic and continuous electrocardiographic monitoring. A marked reduction in both frequency and intensity of attacks was produced by IABP. Temporary cessation of IABP resulted in rapid recurrence of angina in 40% of patients. All underwent selective coronary angiography and revascularization surgery. The overall mortality was 5.5% and the incidence of intraoperative myocardial infarction was under 2%. Follow-up evaluation after an average of 18 months has shown no late deaths and sustained clinical improvement.
...
PMID:Refractory angina pectoris: follow-up after intraaortic balloon pumping and surgery. 108 45

A case of Prinzmetal angina occurred in a recipient of a cadaver kidney transplant who was treated with aortocoronary vein graft. The patient had severe retrosternal chest pain associated with ST-segment elevation in the precordial leads. Coronary arteriograms disclosed two major lesions in the proximal anterior descending artery. Aortocoronary vein graft was successfully performed with no untoward effect on the renal status. The patient has been free of angina approximately two years postoperatively.
...
PMID:Aortocoronary vein graft surgery in a cadaver kidney transplant recipient. 110 67

Two cases presenting with episodes of marked ST segment elevation occurring with, but most often without, anginal pain are reported. The changes were recorded through continuous ECG monitoring during Prinzmetal's angina and in the course of myocardial infarction. Such transient asymptomatic ECG abnormalities reveal silent acute myocardial ischemia and are often unrecognized. However, they may lead to severe arrhythmias or myocardial infarction, and sudden deaths occurring in the course of ischemic heart disease are likely to be explained on this basis. Transient episodes of silent ST segment elevation similar to those occurring in Prinztal's angina have been reported in various circumstances. They bring into discussion the delimitations of variant angina pectoris.
...
PMID:Transient ST segment elevation occurring without anginal pain. Correlations with Prinzmetal's angina. 115 52

Coronary arteriography performed in 17 patients with Prinzmetal's variant angina demonstrated high grade fixed obstructions in 9 patients (Group I) and insignificant or no fixed lesions in 8 patients (Group II). Group I consisted mostly of middle-aged or elderly men with S-T segment elevations in various sites; Group II included five younger women with S-T segment elevations in inferior electrocardiographic leads. In Group I patients, arteriography revealed a discrete high grade lesion located proximally in a major coronary artery in four patients and multivessel involvement in five patients. In Group II patients, spontaneous spasm was documented in three patients and spasm was pharmacologically provoked in two others during arteriography. The current study indicates that spasm is the responsible pathogenetic mechanism of myocardial ischemia in some patients with Prinzmetal angina and that this mechanism may be suspected from the clinical characteristics of these patients.
...
PMID:Clinical and arteriographic features of Prinzmetal's variant angina: documentation of etiologic factors. 126 48

In a patient with a normal electrocardiogram, normal treadmill exercise test, normal coronary arteriogram and no symptoms to suggest angina pectoris, continuous monitoring during several days exhibited repetitive (one to two per hour) S-T segment elevations in the precordial electrocardiographic leads and hemodynamic changes typical of Prinzmetal's angina (reduction in arterial pressure and cardiac index and increase in systemic peripheral resistance and pulmonary wedge pressure). This case demonstrates that electrical and dynamic cardiac alterations of Prinzmetal's angina can occur even in the absence of angina pectoris.
...
PMID:Repetitive myocardial ischemia of Prinzmetal type without angina pectoris. 126 58

Since the registration of sumatriptan (Imigran) in May 1991, the Netherlands Centre for Monitoring of Adverse Reactions to Drugs received 13 reports of substernal chest tightness or pain attributed to its use. These concerned 11 women and two men with an average age of 41 years, who developed angina-like symptoms mostly within one hour after oral or subcutaneous administration. Electrocardiography (in three patients) and echocardiography (in one patient), performed after resolution of the symptoms, were normal. With the exception of one patient, none had experienced such symptoms before. Although sumatriptan is an effective anti-migrainous drug, cautious use is strongly advised. Sumatriptan is contraindicated in patients with coronary artery disease or variant angina pectoris.
...
PMID:[Chest pain due to sumatriptan]. 136 82


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>