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

The relation of clinical and electrocardiographic variables to the severity of coronary lesions in unstable angina was studied in 84 men and 8 women, aged thirty-nine to seventy-five, who were subjected to coronary arteriography within two weeks. Eighty-seven patients (94.6%) had significant stenosis (50% of the diameter) of at least one vessel, whereas 5 (5.4%) had normal coronary arteries. Eleven (12%) had one-vessel disease, 13 (14%) had two-vessel, and 63 (68.5%) had three-vessel disease. Twelve (13%) had also significant left main stem stenosis. Except for 1 patient with artificial pacemaker, three-vessel and/or left main stem disease was present in 20 (100%) patients with ST segment deviation > or = 0.2mV as compared with 20 of 36 patients (55.5%) with ST segment deviation of 0.1-0.19 mV and 24 of the 35 (68.6%) with no additional ECG changes or with T wave inversion only (P < 0.005). The direction of ST segment deviation (elevation or depression) made no difference. Preexisting angina or infarction was associated with three-vessel disease and/or left main stem disease in 74.1% and 81.4%, respectively, as compared with 45.5% (P = 0.05) of the patients with angina of recent onset. Pain at rest persisting for more than forty-eight hours was associated with three-vessel and/or main stem disease in 93.1% of the patients as compared with 60.3% of patients in whom rest angina subsided within forty-eight hours (P < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Correlation of clinical and electrocardiography variables with coronary lesions in unstable angina pectoris. 766 86

The diagnosis of unstable angina encompasses a broad spectrum of patients with myocardial ischemia, varying widely in cause, prognosis and responsiveness to therapy. A new clinical classification of unstable angina is based on the following 2 components: severity, and the clinical setting in which unstable angina develops. The hypothesis that this clinical classification correlates with the underlying coronary artery anatomy was tested. In 238 consecutive patients, an unstable angina score ranging from 2 to 6 was determined by adding the scores for severity (1 = unstable angina without pain at rest; 2 = pain at rest > 48 hours before angiography; and 3 = pain at rest < or = 48 hours before angiographic evaluation) and the clinical setting of unstable angina (1 = unstable angina secondary to a noncardiac condition; 2 = primary unstable angina; and 3 = early postinfarction unstable angina). Fifty concurrently studied consecutive patients with stable angina were assigned a score of 0. Patients with unstable angina averaged 63 +/- 11 years of age, and 165 were men (69%). Pain at rest occurred in 202 of 238 patients (85%), and angiography was performed < or = 48 hours in 139 of these patients (69%). Among patients with unstable angina, 5 (2%) had secondary unstable angina, 143 (60%) had primary unstable angina, and 90 (38%) had postinfarction unstable angina. Multivariable regression analysis identified the unstable angina score as the most important predictor of intracoronary thrombus (p = 0.011) and lesion complexity (p = 0.004) in the ischemia-related artery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Relation between clinical presentation and angiographic findings in unstable angina pectoris, and comparison with that in stable angina. 836 68