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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (
angina
)
21,142
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two patients who had previously experienced old myocardial infarction and who died suddenly after an attack of
chest pain
were examined and discussed. In both cases two of the three main coronary arteries showed severe stenosis with canalization. Ruptured atheromatous plaque was found in the unblocked coronary artery. Fibrin was already formed and surrounded the fractured intimal collagen fiber, foam cells, and cholesterin clefts, but a luminal thrombi had not yet been formed. Fresh occluding thrombi were formed at the site of the ruptured atheromatous plaque. Coronary thrombi containing abscess components such as foam cells, cholesterin clefts, and the fractured intimal collagen fiber were found in our preliminary study. These views support the supposition that this fracture between the lumen and the plaque might precede and be responsible for the formation of the thrombus and the onset of acute myocardial infarction. It was confirmed that the attack of preinfarction
angina
occurred at the time of the rupture of the atheromatous plaque. The rupture of the atheromatous plaque plays an important part as an initiating factor of peinfarction
angina
and myocardial infarction. Thus, it is necessary to examine coronary arteries by serial histopathological section method.
...
PMID:Relationship between myocardial infarction and preinfarction angina: a histopathological study of coronary arteries in two sudden death cases employing serial section. 61 94
Between September 1966 and September 1976, a group of 48 patients with normal coronary arteries or nonsignificant coronary atherosclerosis documented in a first coronary arteriogram underwent a second angiogram because of persistent or recurrent
chest pain
. The interval between studies was 13 to 108 months (mean 42 months). The indication for the first angiogram was typical or atypical
anginal pain
. The patients were separated into two groups according to the results of the first angiogram. Group I included 22 patients, 9 men and 13 women, with normal coronary arteries (mean age 49 years, range 28 to 62). Group II included 26 patients, 18 men and 8 women, with coronary stenosis of less than 50% of intraluminal diameter (mean age 49 years, range 38 to 63). The second angiogram revealed normal coronary arteries in all 22 patients in Group I but showed progression of diseases in 7 (27%) of the 26 patients in group II. The coronary arterial narrowings were greater than 50% in four patients and greater than 70% in only two patients. The clinical course, coronary risk factors and interval between angiograms were not useful predictors of progression of disease. The data suggest that coronary artery disease is unlikely to developed in adults with normal coronary arteries and that roughly 75% of adults with nonsignificant atherosclerosis will not show progression of disease over a 3 to 4 year period.
...
PMID:Angiographic evaluation of the natural history of normal coronary arteries and mild coronary atherosclerosis. 62 15
Seventy-five patients who had
chest pain
but no history or ECG evidence of myocardial infarction (MI) underwent myocardial-stress perfusion scintigraphy (MSPS) with thallium-201, treadmill-stress testing (TST), and coronary cineangiography (CA). The sensitivities of MSPS and TST for coronary stenosis greater than or equal to 75% were 68% and 71%, respectively; their specificities were 97% and 79%, respectively (0.1 greater than p greater than 0.05). When the character of a patient's
chest pain
is considered, Bayesian analysis leads to the following conclusions: (a) MSPS can be useful in pre-CA screening of patients with
chest pain
but no MI if their pain is thought to be of uncertain or nonischemic origin: (b) the sensitivity of Tl-201 MSPS is not sufficient for pre-CA screening of patients without MI who have typical or atypical
angina pectoris
; (c) the sensitivity of MSPS would have to be approximately 95% in order for the test to be useful in pre-CA screening of patients who have atypical
angina pectoris
; (d) MSPS may be superior to TST in these applications; and (e) it is not clear that there is any advantage in combining MSPS and TST into a single screening test rather than using MSPS alone.
...
PMID:The predictive value of myocardial perfusion scintigraphy after stress in patients without previous myocardial infarction. 63 1
1. Voluntary hyperventilation during rest and in the recumbent position induces a fall in H+ concentration, PCO2 and PO2 in mixed venous blood and in the blood of the coronary sinus. 2. In 7 of 12 patients the arterio-venous O2 difference increased by more than 10% of the control value (mean increase 21%). At the same time the O2 extraction of the myocard increased (mean increase 17%) in these subjects. Blood pressure and pulse rate varied only slightly in these experiments. 3.
Chest pain
and
angina pectoris
due to hyperventilation are the result of impaired myocardial O2 supply, a finding which is valid for subjects with and without coronary heart disease.
...
PMID:[Hyperventilation and oxygen supply to the myocardium]. 64 81
The anginal status of the Framingham cohort was ascertained in a uniform manner during 20 years of follow-up studies. There were 74 men and 84 women with newly acquired
angina
that was not complicated with other manifestations of coronary heart disease. Remission of new
angina pectoris
for at least 2 years occurred in 32 percent of the men and 44 percent of the women. In
angina
that had persisted for several years, the subsequent remission rates were lower (14 percent for men and 19 percent for women). The similarity of coronary risk attributes of subjects with transient or persistent
angina
supports the hypothesis that both conditions may be true manifestations of coronary artery disease. Persistence of symptoms seems to indicate a more severe form of the disease characterized by nonspecific S-T segment or T wave abnormalities. It is associated with a greater incidence of myocardial infarction and death than in subjects with transient
angina
. The generally high remission rates must be taken into account in considering drastic surgical or medical remedies for clinical
angina pectoris
. Also, other possible causes for the
chest pain
should be sought.
...
PMID:Remission of clinical angina pectoris: the Framingham study. 67 27
A woman with Prinzmetal's variant
angina
had spontaneous attacks of myocardial ischemia characterized by severe
chest pain
, hypotension, inferior ST-segment elevation, transient complete heart block and selective right ventricular dysfunction. Despite initial improvement following intravenous administration of atropine and sublingual administration of nitroglycerin she died of cardiogenic shock. Autopsy showed normal coronary arteries and acute pericarditis, more pronounced over the right side of the heart. It is postulated that the pericardial inflammation elicited severe spasm of the subjacent right coronary artery.
...
PMID:Prinzmetal's angina, normal coronary arteries and pericarditis. 67 98
Sixty-four patients with a history of disabling
chest pain
belonging to groups III or IV classified according to the NYHA criteria were examined with oesophageal function tests, coronary angiography and bicycle ergometry and also answered a symptom questionnaire. At the exercise test, 52 had effort
angina
; 45 (89%) of them had a pthological coronary angiogram and 22 (42%) had signs of oesophageal dysfunction (OD). OD as the single possible etiological factor for typical effort
angina
therefore seemed unlikely.
Chest pain
was absent or atypical at the exercise test in 12 patients, 11 (92%) of whom had signs of OD. This incidence is significantly higher (p less than 0.01) than that found in the patients with effort-related
chest pain
. Five (42%) of the 12 patients with atypical chest pain at the exercise test had a pathological coronary angiogram, an incidence which is significantly lower (p less than 0.001) than that found in the group with effort-related
chest pain
. In patients with a history of disabling
chest pain
but with atypical chest pain in connection with the exercise test, OD was more frequent than coronary disease and therefore more likely to have caused the symptoms.
...
PMID:Oesophageal function and coronary angiogram in patients with disabling chest pain. 69 16
Mitral leaflet prolapse syndrome has been associated with anginal
chest pain
, atypical chest pain, electrocardiographic abnormalities and positive stress electrocardiograms. These features overlap those of ischemic heart disease. Furthermore, coronary artery disease is frequently associated with mitral leaflet prolapse. This study evaluated the usefulness of stress myocardial scintigraphy in distinguishing these two disorders. Thirty-two patients with an angiographic diagnosis of mitral leaflet prolapse were studied. Of the 22 patients (8 men and 14 women, mean age 48 years) with a normal coronary arteriogram, 5 had "typical"
angina pectoris
, 6 had resting electrocardiographic abnormalities and 6 had a positive stress electrocardiogram; all 22 patients had a normal stress myocardial scintigram. Of the 10 patients (7 men and 3 women, mean age 55 years) with at least 70 percent stenosis of one coronary artery, 6 had "typical"
angina pectoris
, 1 had resting electrocardiographic abnormalities and 7 had a positive stress electrocardiogram. Nine of these 10 patients had one or more demonstrable perfusion defects on stress myocardial scintigrams. It is concluded that mitral leaflet prolapse syndrome is not associated with regional myocardial ischemia as demonstrated with stress scintigraphy, and that stress scintigraphy, a noninvasive technique, is useful in distinguishing the mitral prolapse syndrome from mitral prolapse associated with coronary artery disease.
...
PMID:Stress myocardial imaging in mitral leaflet prolapse syndrome. 70 87
The response to electrocardiographically monitored submaximal exercise stress testing has been studied in 44 patients with mitral leaflet prolapse (MLP). With exercise, ventricular premature contractions occurred in 7, ventricular tachycardia in 1, and atrial fibrillation in 1. Exercise was terminated short of target heart rate in 18 patients, because of
chest pain
(5), fatigue (7), ventricular arrhythmia (4), dizziness (1) or ST segment depression (1). 23 patients developed postexercise ST segment abnormalities, of whom 5 had 'ischemic' patterns and arteriographically proven coronary artery disease (CAD); among the 18 others, the ST segments were depressed and minimally downsloping in 2, slowly ascending from depressed J point in 3, horizontal for greater than or equal to 80 msec with J depression of less than 1 mm in 12, and cupped in 1. The incidence of arrhythmias provoked by submaximal exercise stress testing in patients with MLP was lower than suggested in previous reports. In all 5 cases where MLP and CAD coexisted, the classical 'ischemic' electrocardiographic response to exercise was not obscured. Even in the absence of CAD, postexercise ST segment abnormalities were common with MLP (18/39 = 46%) and differed from the progressively resolving ST segment deviation characteristic of CAD with
angina
. Exercise testing can safely be recommended, subject to standard contraindications, in patients with MLP and yields useful information.
...
PMID:The electrocardiographic response to exercise in 44 patients with leaflet prolapse. 71 Apr 93
One hundred patients with
angina pectoris
underwent 16-point electrocardiographic (ECG) mapping of the left hemithorax during a standardised exercise test. Forty-five patients had maximum ST-segment depression at position V5, while 35 had no ECG signs of ischaemia at this position. In 20 V5 was on the edge of the precordial area, which showed less severe ST-depression than the central positions. An Oxford ECG recorder and highspeed analyser were modified and used in 50 of the patients with daily
angina
for recording ST-segment changes over 24 hours. Serial 24-hour ambulatory recordings from the edge of the precordial area of ischaemia identified during exercise detected a mean of only 14 +/- SD 3% of the episodes of ST-segment changes recorded from the centre of the same area. Only 16 +/- 2% of the episodes detected by ECG were accompanied by
chest pain
. More episodes occurred between 4 am and 6 am than at any other time during the night. This study shows the importance of recording ECG evidence of ischaemia from the precordial position showing maximum changes during exercise. ECG evidence of ischaemia occurs more frequently than
anginal pain
. These objective measurements add important information to the frequency of
chest pain
reported by patients with ischaemic heart disease.
...
PMID:Myocardial ischaemia in patients with frequent angina pectoris. 72 37
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