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

In a study of 117 consecutive aortic valve replacements in which selective coronary perfusion was routinely employed, four patients developed coronary ostial stenosis (3.5 per cent). Continuous selective coronary perfusion was performed by use of Mayo balloon catheters with individual measuring of pressure and flow. All 4 patients developed progressive symptoms of angina pectoris within 6 months of the original operation, after uneventful recoveries. All 4 were found to have lesions in the left main coronary ostium and required a coronary bypass. Two made uneventful recoveries and are presently asymptomatic, whereas 2 died in the immediate postoperative period. The literature indicates that the reported incidence of this complication varies from 1 to 5 per cent. Furthermore, the mortality rate for reoperation in these patients is higher than that for those undergoing uncomplicated coronary bypass without an antecedent procedure. Our experience confirms the lethal nature of this complication and the necessity for reoperation once the diagnosis is established. The development of these dangerous lesions must be taken into account in the prevailing controversy between the most effective methods of myocardial protection during aortic valve replacement.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1976 Jul
PMID:Postperfusion coronary ostial stenosis: incidence and significance. 93 55

Circulating blood volume, cardiac index, heart rate, and ejection rate were measured in patients with angina pectoris. The controls and the patients were divided in sub-groups of those under 45 and over 45 years of age. The investigation was carried out using the isotope method. A significant difference was observed in the value of intravascular blood volume at rest between the controls and patients with ischaemic heart disease unrelated to anginal attack. The blood volume was 5.6 litre in the control group and 6.4 litre in patients with ischaemic heart disease. Exercise tests produced further increases during attack in the blood volume of angina patients. A significant increase of blood volume after moderate exercise was also observed in patients under 45 with ischaemic heart disease but without angina. It is suggested that the increase of intravascular blood volume plays a part in the pathogenesis of angina pectoris.
Cardiovasc Res 1976 Mar
PMID:Increase of intravascular blood volume in Ischaemic heart disease. 93 84

The data from 88 patients (pts) with aortic stenosis (AS) were reviewed to determine relationships between angina pectoris (AP) and coronary artery disease (CAD). Results of surgery performed in 81 of these pts was analyzed. All pts had coronary arteriograms, and lesions greater than or equal to 50% were considered significant. Fifty-nine pts had an aortic valve gradient measured at catheterization greater than or equal to 40 mmHg, and in 29 pts, AS was confirmed at operation. Sixty-eight pts (77%) experienced AP, and 32 had coexisting CAD (47%); 9 of 20 pts without AP had CAD (45%). There were no significant differences in the incidence of AP in pts divided into subgroups by the aortic valve gradient (40-50, 51-100, 101-200 mmHg) or age (40-59, 60-81 years). Also, no significant differences were found in the incidence or extent of CAD between the two age groups; the extent of CAD was similar regardless of the presence or absence of AP. In pts with AP (1) CAD was more likely in pts greater than or equal to 60 years of age; (2) CAD was less likely when the aortic valve gradient was greater than 100 mmHg, suggesting that AP in these pts was due to hemodynamically severe AS. All pts with 3-vessel CAD experienced AP, and the aortic valve gradient was less in these pts than in those with no CAD or less extensive CAD. In 19 pts with combined AS and CAD who had both the aortic valve replaced and a revascularization operation only 1 of pts died in the hospital, while 3 of 19 pts with combined AS and CAD who had aortic valve replacement alone died. In this study a significant number of pts with AS experienced AP, and the presence or absence of AP did not predict coexisting CAD. Coronary arteriography is recommended in the evaluation of pts greater than or equal to 40 years of age with AS. The operative mortality appears to be decreased in pts with AS and CAD who have combined surgery.
Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn 1976
PMID:Aortic stenosis, angina pectoris, coronary artery disease. 95 72

Cardiovascular responses to a stream of cold air (0-10degrees C) directed towards the face and abdomen separately were examined in 12 human subjects. Cold air directed at the side of the face produced a 36+/-6 degrees increase in forearm vascular resistance and 22"/-4 degrees reduction in blood flow. Cold air on the abdomen did not produce a significant change in vascular resistance. The results are discussed in relation to angina pectoris evoked by cold wind.
Cardiovasc Res 1976 Nov
PMID:Cardiovascular responses in man to a stream of cold air. 99 Nov 68

Sixteen of 994 patients with arteriosclerotic heart disease and dominant right coronary arteries had isolated left circumflex obstruction. Of these, 6 patients had significant (75%) narrowing in the main circumflex, 10 in 1 or the marginal branches and 1 in the atrioventricular groove branch. Angina was mild in 5, moderate to severe in 8, and unstable in 1. Four patients had prior myocardial infarction (MI), and 1 had a recent MI complicated by posterior papillary muscle rupture. The EKG was normal in 5, showed an MI in 2, LBBB in 1, RBBB in 2, ST-T wave changes in 3, LVH in 2, and atrial fibrillation in 2. Left ventricular angiography performed in the right anterior oblique projection revealed normal contraction in 9 patients, apical hypokinesis in 4, posterobasal hypokinesis in 1, and diffuse hypokinesis in 2. The left ventribular end diastolic pressure was normal in 11 patients and elevated in 5. The cardiac index was normal in 12 patients and reduced in 2. Isolated, nondominant, left circumflex coronary disease is an uncommon entity in symptomatic patients. However, when present, it may produce significant clinical and hemodynamic impairment.
Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn 1976
PMID:The clinical and angiographic spectrum of isolated, nondominant, left circumflex coronary disease. 99 Dec 64

With the advent of direct coronary artery revascularization, the high mortality rate from cardiac disease associated with carotid endarterectomy can be favorably altered by simultaneous or staged revascularization for combined lesions. The choice for combined or sequential procedures is determined by the severity of the disease both clinically and anatomically in each system. Review of 32 patients with both severe coronary and carotid occlusive disease established that selective surgical intervention has been successful, with no deaths and only minimal morbidity. Simultaneous revascularization was carried out in 8 patients with preinfarctional angina, significant left main lesion or triple vessel disease producing a functional lesion of the left main coronary artery, and tight carotid lesion. Staged operations were performed in the remaining 24 patients. Priority of staging was determined by the extent of disease in each system.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1976 Dec
PMID:Management of concomitant occlusive disease of the carotid and coronary arteries. 99 32

Thirty-three patients with angina (31 men and 2 women, age 33 to 68 years, 52), as well as signs and symptoms of severe left ventricular dysfunction, were evaluated for coronary revascularization surgery. All had multiple vessel coronary artery disease and at least one prior myocardial infarction. Cardiac catheterization demonstrated abnormally elevated left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LUEDP), low cardiac output, and depressed resting biplane systolic ejection fraction (SEF) ranging from 18 to 45 per cent (31 per cent). To evaluate potential myocardial function, a premature ventricular contraction was introduced during the ventriculogram and the SEF of the postextrasystolic potentiated (PESP) beat calculated and compared to a sinus beat SEF. Patients were separated into two groups based on the increase in SEF: those with greater than 0.10 augmentation (24 patients) and those with less than 0.10 augmentation (9 patients). Coronary revascularization was carried out with at least two bypass grafts in each patient. The operative mortality in those with more than 0.1 SEF augmentation was 9 per cent (2/24), late mortality rate 5 per cent (1/22), and 20/21 became Class I or II in the follow-up period of 11 to 57 months (25). Operative mortality in those with SEF augmentation of less than 0.1 3/9 33 per cent), late mortality rate 1/6, and only 1/5 achieved Class 1 status during the follow-up period of 10 to 35 months (22) postoperatively. These data suggest that significant augmentation of SEF by a premature ventricular contraction is a simple and useful indicator to aid in selection of patients with left ventricular dysfunction for coronary revascularization.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1976 Dec
PMID:Use of the augmented ejection fraction to select patients with left ventricular dysfunction for coronary revascularization. 99 33

Between 1968 and 1971, 252 patients with severe ventricular malfunction underwent revascularization surgery. By means of single-plane ventriculography, the ventricle was divided into six segments, three anteriorly and three inferiorly, and ejection fractions were calculated. Patients were classified into four groups according to these observations. Results were assessed in regard to relief of angina, graft patency status, surgical mortality rate, and survival as determined by actuarial life-table analysis. These results were then compared to over-all medical and surgical experience contained in the Milwaukee Cardiovascular Data Registry as well as to other reported series of medical treatment for similar degrees of coronary artery disease and impairment of left ventricular function. Comparison between the surgical and medical series suggests improved survival and improved quality of life in the surgically treated patients. Thus many patients with severe ventricular malfunction, especially if associated with angina, can be reasonably considered candidates for surgery.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1976 Dec
PMID:The "bad" left ventricle. Results of coronary surgery and effect on late survival. 99 34

The hemodynamic effects of nifedipine and propranolol administered intravenously were studied in 17 patients with angina pectoris. Nine patients received nifedipine and eight received propranolol. The hemodynamic parameters were compared at rest and during supine bicycle exercise at work loads known to produce angina. Exercise-induced angina improved in four out of nine patients following nifedipine and in one out of eight patients following propranolol. Nifedipine significantly reduced the increment of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and Vmax during exercise. Intravenous propranolol significantly suppressed the increment of heart rate, max dp/dt, tension time index, and Vmax during exercise. Although the exact mode of action of nifedipine remains uncertain, it is suggested that it decreases myocardial oxygen requirements primarily through a reduction of left ventricular volume, whereas propranolol suppresses the positive chronotropic and inotropic responses of the heart muscle to exercise.
Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn 1976
PMID:Effects of Adalat (nifedipine) on left ventricular hemodynamics in angina pectoris: comparative study with propranolol. 100 Jun 24

Ectopic origin of the right coronary artery from the left sinus of Valsalva is an infrequent coronary anomaly. The right coronary artery then passes between the aorta and pulmonary artery. We report two such cases with chest pain suggestive of angina pectoris in the absence of atherosclerosis, as demonstrated by selective coronary arteriography. A technique for selectively catheterizing the ectopic right coronary artery is described.
Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn 1976
PMID:Anomalous origin of the right coronary artery from the left sinus of Valsalva with associated chest pain: report of two cases. 100 Jun 28


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