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)

Fifteen patients were examined by echocardiography during the atrial stimulation test. The patients were divided into 2 groups: the main group of 8 patients with ischemic heart disease and a control group of 7 persons wit a negative bicycle ergometry test and no changes in the coronary arteries. It is shown that acceleration of the cardiac rhythm leads to a proportional decrease in the left-ventricular end-diastolic diameter and increase in Vcf and diastolic thickness of the myocardium; the ejection fractions, minute volume and index of left-ventricular activity do not change. It was revealed that the development of myocardial ischemia leads to myocardial asynergy, decrease in the ejection fraction. Vcf, index of left-ventricular activity and minute volume and to an increase in the end-diastolic diameter of the left ventricle, which precede the ECG changes and the development of an angina attack.
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PMID:[Intracardiac hemodynamics in heart rhythm acceleration and the development of an angina attack]. 720 26

Homeostasis of cardiac output is maintained by a complex intergration of many physiologic responses, both central and peripheral, including pulse,the contractile state of the ventricle, and pre-and after load. In the abnormal ventricle at rest, any or all of the measurable parameters that define left ventricular function may be normal. However, in disease states, exercise can provoke abnormalities in these parameters indicating a reduction in myocardial reserve. Regional asynergy occurs in patients with significant ischemic heart disease during exercise reflecting a local supply-demand mismatch. Recently, radionuclide ventriculography has been combined with exercise techniques in attempts to elucidate details of the normal and abnormal ventricular response to stress noninvasively. The majority of data describe the response of the ventricle during graded supine bicycle exercise. The normal response is to increase myocardial contractility, reducing end-systolic volume, while end-diastolic volume remains constant. This results in an increase in ejection fraction. In ischemic ventricles, regional asynergy develops and ejection fractions may either fall or fail to rise. This appears to be accomplished by an increase or no change in the end-diastolic volume, with an increase in end-systolic volume, particularly in patients with angina during exercise. Radionuclide methods can be applied to large mumbers of patients providing informaton that is unobtainable by more invasive procedures. This review traces the development of knowledge of the ventricular response to exercise, emphasizing the role of radionuclide ventriculography. Although radionuclide angiography has the capacity for advancing the understanding of the ventricular response to exercise, the technical limitations of this technique in specific diagnostic conditions has yet to be defined adequately.
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PMID:Physiologic Intervention in Cardiovascular Nuclear Medicine. 724 62

Among 3,000 patients studied by coronary arteriography during a 4-year period, 31 patients (1%) had coronary artery disease limited to a diagonal branch of the left anterior descending (15 patients), marginal branch of the left circumflex (10 patients), or to both branches (6 patients). Ten patients had 50-69% and twenty-one had greater than or equal to 70% diameter narrowing. The suitability for grafting was noted in 20 patients as judged by the caliber and distribution of the diseased branches. Collaterals were noted in seven patients. Disease was present in 28 men and 3 women (age range 38-70 years). At least one major coronary risk factor was present in 27 patients. Angina was noted in 27 patients; prior myocardial infarction was noted in 5 patients by history and in 4 by ECG. The left ventriculogram was normal in 22 patients and showed mild segmental asynergy in 9; ejection fraction was normal in all. Exercise ECGs were positive in 12 of 25 patients; exercise 201thallium scans were positive in 13. All patients responded to medical therapy. In conclusion, among the population of patients who undergo catheterization, coronary branch disease is rare. The clinical findings are indistinguishable from patients with major coronary disease. Prognosis remains benign and patients respond to medical therapy.
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PMID:Coronary artery disease confined to secondary branches of the left coronary system. 726 87

To detect abnormal interventricular septal (IVS) motion during exercise-induced ischemia, ergometer exercise echocardiography was performed using a specially devised transducer in 12 patients (pts) with effort angina (left anterior descending artery disease) and 10 normal subjects (N) at rest, and during exercise and recovery. During exercise, percent systolic IVS thickening (% delta T) and IVS excursion (Ex) increased from 52 +/- 13% at rest to 73 +/- 19% and from 7.0 /- 1.3 mm at rest to 10.6 +/- 1.9 mm, respectively, in N, and also from 52 +/- 23% to 67 +/- 36% and from 7.3 +/- 1.9 mm to 9.7 +/- 2.1 mm in all of 3 pts with distal left anterior descending artery disease. On the other hand, in 9 pts with proximal left anterior descending artery disease, % delta T and Ex during exercise decreased from 41 +/- 17+ at rest to 26 +/- 25% and from 7.7 +/- 1.2 mm to 5.1 +/- 4.6 mm. The late systolic wall thickening of IVS was observed during peak exercise in 2 of the 9 pts, one of whom exhibited systolic IVS thinning and a decrease in diastolic thickness (from 6 mm to 4.5 mm). In 5 pts with IVS asynergy during exercise diastolic IVS thickness increased maximally from 10.2 +/- 3.3 mm at rest to 11.4 +/- 3.5 mm during recovery (reactive hyperemia). Exercise echocardiography is useful to predict the location of left anterior descending artery disease and to evaluate IVS performance during exercise-induced ischemia.
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PMID:[Exercise echocardiography: interventricular septal thickness and motion in patients with effort angina during ergometer exercise (author's transl)]. 726 97

In order to detect an exercise induced asynergy, cross-sectional echocardiography was performed during multistage maximal bicycle ergometer stress test in the supine position. 1) Left ventricular (LV) asynergy occurred earlier than or simultaneously with the appreciable ST segment change. 2) In patients with angina, LV asynergy appeared in the area of dominant coronary stenosis, while ST depression was seen in V3-6 as well as II, III and aVF, despite of the localized area of asynergy. 3) In patients with myocardial infarction, LV asynergy increased or extended over or around the infarcted area except one case, ST segment elevated in the leads over the infarction with abnormal Q waves and depressed in the reciprocal leads. These observations revealed that ST depression does not necessarily mean an occurrence of new ischemia over the corresponding area in myocardial infarction. Thus exercise cross-sectional echocardiography was demonstrated to be a good method to detect an exercise induced ischemia and would be particularly valuable in view of the coronary artery bypass.
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PMID:[Detection of exercise induced left ventricular asynergy by two-dimensional echocardiography (author's transl)]. 734 25

Radionuclide angiocardiography was utilized for the measurement of left ventricular dynamics and the analysis of its segmental wall motion. Left ventricular performance was measured by the first pass method and gated equilibrium method in patients with ischemic heart disease. The left ventricular wall motion was also examined by the analysis of computer-drawn outlines of radioactivity counts of the left ventricular chamber. These measurements were well correlated with those obtained by invasive methods such as contrast cine-ventriculography and thermodilution method in the resting state. The patients with effort angina often showed an almost normal left ventricular performance and wall motion in the resting state without ischemic episodes. However, at the time when anginal attack was provoked with exercise testing, an asynergy and a reduced performance of left ventricle were observed. The extent and localization of this asynergy well corresponded with the defect of myocardial scintigrams determined by 201-Tl stress myocardial imaging. From above findings we conclude that the myocardial ischemia with asynergy is a cause of decreased left ventricular hemodynamics during anginal attack. Although further evaluation is necessary to know limitations and to avoid inaccuracy, these techniques were shown to have a significant usefullness in evaluating ischemic heart disease.
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PMID:Evaluation of the left ventricular performance in patients with ischemic heart disease using radionuclide angiocardiography. 745 99

In recent years, increasing evidence has pointed to the potential of dipyridamole stress echocardiography as a fast, effective, inexpensive method of risk stratification after an acute myocardial infarction. A very early stratification by this test could improve the patient's management and reduce the duration of in-hospital stay, and, thus, the costs. Two-hundred and fifty-one consecutive patients (208 male, age 58 +/- 11) with a two-dimensional echocardiogram of good technical quality underwent a dipyridamole echocardiographic test (DET) 70 +/- 6 h after an acute myocardial infarction. Criterion for positivity was the identification of a transient regional asynergy that was absent or of a lower degree in the baseline examination. Positivity was defined as 'at low-dose' or 'at high-dose' if the asynergy was detected before or after the 8th min of a drug infusion. All tests were performed without any major side effects. DET was positive in 149 (59%) and negative in 102 (41%) patients. During the hospital stay, cardiac events (death, reinfarction, angina) occurred in 52/251 patients: in 49/149 with a positive and in 3/102 with a negative test (sensitivity 94%, negative predictive value 97%, P < 0.00001). Severe events (death and reinfarction) occurred in 14/251: in 12/149 with a positive DET and in 2/102 with a negative DET (sensitivity 86%; negative predictive value: 98%; P < 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Dipyridamole echocardiographic test performed 3 days after an acute myocardial infarction: feasibility, tolerability, safety and in-hospital prognostic value. 808 74

To clarify the significance of exercise BMIPP (beta-methyl iodophenyl pentadecanoic acid) and resting T1 delayed single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in the assessment of ischemia and viability, we studied maximal exercise-loading BMIPP SPECT following rest-injected T1 3 h SPECT in 11 control subjects, 20 patients with effort angina and 38 patients with old myocardial infarction. The left ventricular wall on ECT was divided into 9 segments. BMIPP and T1 uptake were scored as 0 = normal, 1 = reduced, 2 = severely reduced, or 3 = absent. Discordance was defined as when segments with a reduced BMIPP uptake had a better resting T1 uptake. Significant coronary artery stenosis was defined as stenosis of 75% or greater on coronary arteriogram. Left ventricular wall motion was assessed as either normokinesis, hypokinesis, severe hypokinesis, akinesis or dyskinesis on left ventriculogram. When discordance was considered to be a marker of ischemia, the sensitivity and specificity in effort angina and control subjects were 95.2% and 84.6% for patients and 83.9% and 94.4% for diseased vessels, respectively. There were no differences between the sensitivity and specificity in left anterior descending artery (LAD), left circumflex artery (LCx) and right coronary artery (RCA) lesions (83.3%, 95.5% in LAD, 83.3%, 95.5% in LCx, 85.7%, 92.6% in RCA, respectively). All of the patients with old myocardial infarction had reduced exercise BMIPP uptake in infarcted regions. In old myocardial infarction, 35 patients had segments with discordant uptake. Discordance was observed in 75 (91.5%) of 82 segments with hypokinesis, and in 24 (92.3%) of 26 segments with severe hypokinesis. Even among the 36 segments with akinesis or dyskinesis, 25 (69.0%) had discordant uptake. When discordance in the infarcted region was considered to be a marker of viability, regions with severe asynergy showed a high possibility of viability. Thus, discordant uptake on exercise BMIPP and resting T1 delayed SPECT may be a useful marker of ischemia in effort angina and of viability in old myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Exercise beta-methyl iodophenyl acid (BMIPP) and resting thalium delayed single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in the assessment of ischemia and viability. 864 80

The aim of this study was to assess the value of adenosine (A) and the combination of nitroglycerin (N) with dobutamine (D) stress echocardiography (SE) in the identification of viable myocardium. The clinical and electrocardiographic (ECG) effects of both tests were also evaluated. Fifty-two coronary artery disease patients, aged 56.4 +/- 8 years, with left ventricular dysfunction due to a previous myocardial infarction (mean ejection fraction: 49 +/- 8%) were included in the study. Cardiac catheterization was performed in all patients before A (140 micrograms/kg/minute for five minutes) and the combination of N with D (5-10 micrograms/kg/minute) stress echocardiography. On the echocardiogram, the left ventricle was divided into 16 segments and wall motion was graded semiquantitatively from 1 (normal) to 4 (dyskinesia). The echocardiographic index was also estimated. A segment was considered viable during A infusion when resting asynergy showed deterioration of one grade or more. In contrast, segmental viability was considered to be present during the combination of N with D infusion when resting asynergy showed improvement of one grade or more. A thallium 201 single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) with reinjection was performed as reference standard for the identification of viable myocardium. Stress echocardiography during infusion of A was associated with short-duration angina attacks in 3 (5.8%) patients and transient complete atrioventricular (AV) block in 1 (1.9%), whereas during the combination of N with D infusion, 6 (11.5%) patients experienced ventricular bigeminy lasting for a short period. ST segment elevation greater than 1 mm was recorded in those leads having a Q wave, in 19 (36.5%) patients. In 10 of these 19 (52.6%), viable myocardium was present in SPECT, as it was in 33 patients (63.5%) having no ST segment elevation (P = NS). Of a total of 832 segments that were graded during A-SE, 276 exhibited resting asynergy and the remaining 556 had normal motion and thickening at rest. The echocardiographic index during A infusion increased from 1.52 +/- 0.22 to 1.71 +/- 0.24 (P < 0.001), whereas during D and N infusion it decreased from 1.53 +/- 0.31 to 1.30 +/- 0.42 (P < 0.001). With SPECT considered as the gold standard for the identification of viable myocardium, sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of A-SE in detecting viable myocardium were 54%, 86%, 65% and 80%, respectively. The respective values for the combination of nitroglycerin with D-SE were 91%, 89%, 78%, and 96%, respectively. Stress echocardiography during A, and the combination of N with D, constitute safe methods in the identification of viable myocardium. The detection of ST segment elevation in the ECG leads with a Q wave during the combined infusion of nitroglycerin and dobutamine is not related to the presence of viable myocardial tissue. The A-SE provide moderate diagnostic accuracy, while the combination of N with D during SE is much superior in detecting viable myocardium.
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PMID:Stress echocardiography using adenosine combined with nitroglycerin-dobutamine in the detection of viable myocardium in patients with previous myocardial infarction. 934 75

The influence of the beta-blocker metoprolol on the capacity either of low-dose dobutamine echocardiography or the recently introduced enoximone echocardiography to detect viable dysfunctioning myocardium after myocardial infarction was investigated. Initial clinical experience would suggest that the phosphodiesterase III inhibitor enoximona could be an alternative pharmacological stimulation, inducing an increase in contractility in the presence or absence of beta-receptor stimulation. Ten patients with a baseline low-dose dobutamine-echocardiographic test (up to 10 micrograms/kg/min) positive for myocardial viability in > or = 1 segment(s), performed 4-5 days after a first acute myocardial infarction treated with rtPA, were randomized after the administration of intravenous metoprolol (15 mg in three 5-mg boluses) either to dobutamine (up to 15 micrograms/kg/min) or to an enoximone intravenous bolus (1 mg/kg over 5 min) under echocardiographic monitoring, in a crossover sequence, with a 24-h interval. The infarct related artery was patent (TIMI grade 2 o 3) in all the patients. Follow-up echocardiograms were performed 5-7 weeks later. Resting asynergy was found in 40 segments; of these, 17 were viable. All the viable segments remained unresponsive during the post-metoprolol dobutamine infusion, while improved their contractility during enoximone echocardiography. Two patients suffering from early post-infarction angina underwent coronary angioplasty successfully. Eight out of ten patients (2 revascularized and 6 not) showed contractile recovery in a total of 14 segments at the follow-up echocardiogram. Sensitivity, specificity and overall accuracy in predicting reversible dysfunction after acute myocardial infarction for enoximone echocardiography were 93, 85, and 88%, respectively. Our results support the value of enoximone echocardiography in the identification of myocardial viability after myocardial infarction, in patients treated with beta-blockers, which interfere heavily with the results of dobutamine echocardiography.
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PMID:Identification of viable myocardium early after acute myocardial infarction under beta-blockade by enoximone echocardiography. 919 52


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