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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (angina)
21,142 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The pre- and postoperative systolic time intervals, hemodynamics and serum catecholamines were studied in 30 patients with successful myocardial revascularization surgery or left ventricular aneurysmectomy and the influence of the surgery on the left ventricular function was evaluated. 1. Significant depression of left ventricular performance was recognized in the group of patients with left ventricular aneurysm as compared to the patients with angina pectoris with or without previous myocardial infarction before the operation. 2. At 2 hours after the operation, signigicant decrease of ET/PEP, cardiac index and stroke work index and marked elevation of systemic vascular resistance were seen in the group of patients with aortocoronary bypass surgery who had previous myocardial infarction and with left ventricular aneurysmectomy as compared to the group of patients without previous myocardial infarction. 3. At 2 hours after the operation, ET/PEP seemed to reflect the left ventricular stroke work and the depression of the left ventricular function was mainly affected by the elevation of systemic vascular resistance due to the hypersecrection of serum catecholamines. 4. Reduction of systemic vascular resistance by vasodilator brought an improvement of EG/PEP, cardiac index and stroke work index.
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PMID:Influence of surgery for ischemic heart disease on early postoperative left ventricular function. 51 68

The response to exercise during increasing workloads (supine bicycling), was studied in 105 men, of whom 70 had ischemic heart disease and 35 did not, clinically classed into 6 groups. Heart rates, blood pressures and systolic time intervals (STI) were measured in relation to exercise tolerance and capacity. The ischemic heart disease (IHD) subjects differed from the nonischemic by an increased PEP/LVET ratio at rest and by a tendency of the diastolic blood pressure to increase upon exercise. Two main types of abnormal reaction of STI to workload were ascertained: (1) prolonged LVETc with respect to controls (prevailing in angina pectoris), and (2) prolonged PEPEc together with shorter LVETc (typical for left ventricular failure). The dominant feature appears to be the depressed contractility in the latter and a decreased compliance (or rate of relaxation) in the former. Estimation of STI may contribute to the evaluation of the exercise tolerance test in long-term examination of ischemic patients.
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PMID:A noninvasive study of the response of ischemic heart to exercise. 59 Feb 97

Simultaneous determinations of systolic time intervals (preejection period index [PEPI], left ventricular ejection time index [LVETI] and ratio of preejection period to left ventricular ejection time [PEP/LVET]) and echographic measures of left ventricular performance (percent change in minor axis diameter [%delta D], circumferential shortening rate [Vcf] and end-diastolic diameter [Dd]) were obtained in 25 normal subjects and 37 patients with previously documented transmural myocardial infarction. The group with previous infarction demonstrated significant (P less than 0.001) differences from the normal group in each of the noninvasive measures. PEP/LVET and %deltaD were the most sensitive measures of left ventricular dysfunction. Deviation from the normal range in these measures occurred, respectively, in 70 and 65 percent of patients without dyspnea or fatigability (20 patients) and 85 percent of those without angina pectoris (13 patients). Abnormalities in systolic time interval and echocardiographic measures were related to the severity of dyspnea and fatigability but not to that of angina. Neither the presence of phonocardiographically documented third or fourth sound gallops nor an abnormal cardiothoracic ratio by chest roentgenogram reliably detected patients with abnormal left ventricular performance. The range of abnormality in left ventricular performance did not differ between patients with prior anterior or diaphragmatic myocardial infarction. The frequency of abnormal performance was greatest among patients with combined sites of prior infarction. Among 26 patients studied by coronary arteriography, abnormal left ventricular performance as determined by values for PEP/LVET and %deltaD occurred in fewer than 30 percent of those with 70 percent or greater obstruction of one coronary artery and in more than 80 percent of those with two or three vessel involvement. There was a high correlation between systolic time intervals, %delta D and Vcf, the closest correlation occurring between PEP/LVET and %deltaD (r = -0.93). These data document the sensitivity of the noninvasive systolic time intervals and echographic measures and their superiority over current clinical bedside methods in evaluating left ventricular performance in patients with prior myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Left ventricular performance in coronary artery disease evaluated with systolic time intervals and echocardiography. 94 20

Determinations of systolic time intervals and echocardiographic measures of left ventricular performance were made in twenty-five normal subjects and 37 patients who had convalesced from a previous transmural myocardial infarction. On group analysis the patients with previous myocardial infarction demonstrated significant differences from the normals in each of the noninvasive measures. Among the noninvasive measures the PEP/LVET and deltaD% proved to be the most sensitive indicators of left ventricular dysfunction. Deviations from the normal range in PEP/LVET and deltaD% occurred in 65% to 70% of patients asymptomatic for dyspnea and fatigability (20 patients) and in 85% of patients asymptomatic for angina pectoris (13 patients). Neither the presence of phonocardiographically documented S3 or S4 or the finding of an abnormal C/T ratio on standard chest x-ray reliably detected patients with abnormal left ventricular performance. Among 26 patients studied by coronary arteriography, abnormal left ventricular performance by PEP/LVET and deltaD% occurred in less than 30% of those with obstruction (70% or greater) of one coronary artery and in over 80% of those with obstruction of two or three major arteries. A close correlation existed between the level of left ventricular performance measured by the PEP/LVET and the deltaD% (r = 0.93). These studies document the high degree of sensitivity of the noninvasive measures and demonstrate their superiority over clinical methods for detecting abnormal left ventricular performance in patients with previous myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Left ventricular performance in coronary artery disease by systolic time intervals and echocardiography. 96 Apr 23

A technique for the study of patients with angina pectoris has been described, in which systolic time interval (STI) measurements are obtained at intervals after the onset of stress-induced angina. The technique is uniquely suited to the evaluation of anti-anginal drugs. Sublingual isosorbide dinitrate (SISD) was randomly alternated with a placebo (P) tablet in a double-blind study of 20 patients with stable angina pectoris. After SISD, compared to placebo, a highly significant shortening of Q-S2 and LVET occurred (p less than 0.001) which lasted throughout the entire 120 minute study period. The hemodynamic basis for these differences was felt to be improved myocardial contractility secondary to a reduction in systemic vascular resistance and reduced venous return induced by the SISD. A significant prolongation of PEP occurred at 60 minutes post-SISD (p less than 0.01). This was attributed to an increase in the gradient between LVEDP and aortic diastolic pressure resulting from reduced venous return after SISD. The PEP/LVET ratio was significantly increased up to 60 minutes after SISD (P less than 0.05). Heart rate was uniformly higher post-SISD, compared to post-placebo values; the differences were highly significant up to 60 minutes (P less than 0.001) and remained significant at 120 minutes (p less than 0.05). The time to angina was significantly longer (immediately post SISD, p less than 0.05; 30 min, p less than 0.001; 60 mins, p less than 0.05; 120 mins, p less than 0.05); and the work load greater, for 120 minutes following SISD: the increase in the latter was highly significant for 30 minutes after SISD (p less than 0.001) and remained significant up to 120 minutes (60 mins, p less than 0.05; 120 mins, p less than 0.05). These observations were attributed to an improvement in myocardial function due to the sublingual isosorbide dinitrate. A high degree of correlation was found to exist between heart rate and the STI. This correlation was negative for the QS2 interval (-0.996) and LVET (-0.993) and positive for PEP (+0.817) and the PEP/LVET ratio (+0.950).
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PMID:Hemodynamic changes associated with angina pectoris induced by maximal treadmill exercise: effect of sublingual isosorbide dinitrate on systolic time intervals. 105 51

Forty patients with severe angina pectoris were studied before and two weeks after saphenous vein bypass surgery (SVG) in order to assess the effect of this operation on left ventricular performance as judged by systolic time intervals (STI). The patients were divided into two groups: group I included 29 patients in whom no postoperative infarction occurred and group II was composed of 11 patients with postoperative infarction. For group I the PEP/LVET was 0.39 +/- 0.01 preop and slightly but significantly increased at 0.42 +/- 0.004 (P less than 0.025) two weeks postop. The mean preop PEP/LVET was 0.33 +/- 0.01 for group II and dramatically increased to 0.54 +/- 0.02 (P less than 0.001) after surgery. Another striking abnormally was a marked shortening of electromechanical systole (QS2I), which was uniformly present in the postoperative studies. Follow-up studies in 16 patients and urinary catecholamine determination in five patients suggested excessive adrenergic activity was responsible for the abbreviated QS2I. This phenomenon must be considered when interpreting the results of SVG on left ventricular function.
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PMID:Left ventricular function and adrenergic hyperactivity before and after saphenous vein bypass. 126 Sep 84

Left ventricular function was evaluated using parameters derived from the flow velocity waveforms at the ascending aorta as obtained at the suprasternal notch by continuous-wave Doppler echocardiography in 39 patients; 12 with chest pain but without coronary stenosis, eight with angina pectoris; and 19 with myocardial infarction. Peak flow velocity and the time interval from the beginning of the Q wave of lead II of the ECG to peak flow velocity (Q-V peak) correlated with specific invasive hemodynamic parameters, such as max dp/dt and (max dp/dt)/IP (IP: total left ventricular pressure at the same instant) during isometric contraction of the left ventricle measured with a catheter tip manometer, and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) obtained by bi-plane cineangiography (using the area-length method). There was no correlation between the peak flow velocity and the invasive hemodynamic parameters. However, significant negative correlations were observed between the Q-V peak time and max dp/dt, with r = 0.40 (p less than 0.05), and between the Q-V peak time and (max dp/dt)/IP with r = -0.61 (p less than 0.01). A negative correlation was obtained between the Q-V peak time and LVEF (r = -0.75, p less than 0.01). The regression equation was LVEF = -0.67 x (Q-V peak) + 176. To compare the effectiveness for predicting LVEF between the Q-V peak and the established systolic time intervals as PEP and PEP/ET, these time intervals were measured from flow velocity waveforms invasively obtained with a catheter-type electromagnetic flowmeter inserted into the ascending aorta in 14 patients selected from the original subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Noninvasive evaluation of left ventricular function using new systolic time intervals obtained from continuous-wave Doppler echocardiography]. 210 20

In a prospective study 53 patients with alcohol-induced liver disease (fatty liver in 27, cirrhosis in 26) were studied clinically and with non-invasive techniques (electrocardiogram, systolic time intervals, M-mode echocardiography, upright bicycle stress test) to detect a possible cardiac involvement. Mean daily alcohol consumption was comparable in both groups (136 g/day over 16 years vs 124 g/day over 14 years). 15 to 41% of patients (more patients with fatty liver) complaint of angina pectoris and dyspnea at exercise or had palpitations. Echocardiography and systolic time intervals demonstrated in both groups (in patients with cirrhosis despite of a more intensive therapy with digitalis and diuretics) a marked enlargement of left ventricular dimensions with a significant (p less than 0.05) degree of dysfunction (PEP/LVET). Electrocardiography showed abnormalities in 26 to 44% of patients: signs of right ventricular enlargement in 26% of patients with fatty liver, and a prolongation of myocardial repolarisation (QTc) in 44% of patients with cirrhosis. Patients with alcohol-induced liver disease deserve more attention of their cardiac complaints, clinical and functional findings.
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PMID:[Cardiac findings in alcoholic liver disease]. 226 11

A group of 125 patients (of the total of 400 patients) had ischaemic ST-segment depression (greater than or equal to 1 mm) on exercise electrocardiogram. Of 125 patients with ischaemic response on exercise electrocardiogram 83 (66.4%) patients had both ST-segment depression and anginal pain, and 43 (33.6%) patients were without ischaemic symptoms during exercise testing. There was no difference with regard to sex and age between patients with and without anginal pain. There was no difference in frequency of arterial hypertension, but diabetes mellitus was more frequent in patients with painless ST-segment depression than in patients with painful ST-segment depression. Left ventricular function was more deteriorated in patients with painless ST-segment depression (PEP/LVET = 0.390 +/- 0.028) than in symptomatic patients (PEP/LVET = 0.366 +/- 0.042; P/0.001). There was no difference in heart rate on peak exercise and in magnitude of ST-segment depression in patients with and without anginal pain.
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PMID:[Painless ST segment depression during exercise stress tests in patients after acute myocardial infarct]. 249 Sep 96

The purpose of the present work was to evaluate the clinical efficacy and the mechanism of Yi-qi Huo-xue Injection (YHI) in treatment of coronary heart disease. YHI consists of Ginseng, Astragalus and Angelicae Sinensis. The 10% dextrose serves as a placebo. The results were as follows: 1. the frequency and severity of angina episodes were reduced by 90.63%; 2. the ischemic ST-T in ECG was improved in 56.25% of cases; 3. the tolerance to treadmill exercise was increased from 348.50 to 503.50 M.; 4. the left ventricular function was strengthened, PEP/LVET ratio reduced from 0.45 to 0.36, the activity of (Na(+)-K+) ATPase in myocardial cell membrane of rats inhibited by 19.2%; 5. the blood viscosity and erythrocyte electrophoretic time lowered; 6. the adhesion and aggregation of platelet in patients with CHD were inhibited by 27% and 59.4% respectively; 7. the plasma TXB2 level in CHD was reduced from 260.28 +/- 164.4 to 139.29 +/- 57.01 pg/ml; 8. the plasma 6-keto-PGF1 alpha level in CHD was increased from 33.45 +/- 22.5 to 57.48 +/- 13.1 pg/ml, and in rats from 185.77 to 366.33 pg/ml. The differences were all statistically significant (P less than 0.05-0.01) in comparison with the placebo group.
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PMID:Clinical and experimental studies of coronary heart disease treated with yi-qi huo-xue injection. 261 56


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