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 beta blocking agents are valuable drugs in cardiology. They are effective in any fast arrhythmia. Together with nitroglycerin, beta blockers are drugs of first choice in angina. As antihypertensives, they have advantages that should make them drugs of first choice. For migraine the beta blockers are equal to any other type of drug. With more study their place in treating anxiety will be clarified. And without question other uses will be found. It is difficult for this author to understand the attitude of the FDA to this class of drugs. To limit the American physician to only one drug in this large group of drugs is unheard of. Although it can be argued that propranolol is the best one, there are obvious cases where another drug would be better. For example, propranolol induces nightmares in a few patients. There is evidence to show that timolol does this less frequently. FDA delay in approval of propranolol for essential hypertension is totally incomprehensible. Other approved drugs are less effective and much more toxic. Propranolol, and the other beta blockers, are safe and effective. The adverse beta effects are easily controlled or avoided. The other adverse effects are no more frequent than with any other class of drugs, and all are reversible. It is to be hoped that science and common sense will prevail over bureaucratic indecision.
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PMID:Present state of alpha and beta adrenergic drugs III. Beta blocking agents. 1 53

Some of the symptoms and signs of hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism in elderly patients may be mistakenly attributed to "old age." Weight loss, muscle weakness, tremor, angina, congestive heart failure--all signs of hyperthyroidism--are also concomitants of aging. Fatigue, sluggishness, withdrawal behavior, senile atrophic skin changes--all signs of hypothroidism--are also a part of the normal aging process. Although screening elderly people for thyroid disease is economically unsound, the physician should maintain a high index of suspicion of its presence. Laboratory tests must be interpreted with extra care. Values of 131I uptake, serum T4 and T3, thyroid-stimulating hormone, and thyrotropin-releasing hormone are all helpful in diagnosis. Thyroid disease is easily treated in elderly patients, and results often are dramatic. Propranolol is effective in thyrotoxic patients when symptoms require prompt relief. The definitive treatment, however, is 131I; antithyroid drugs are difficult to manage. Hypothyroidism is easily treated with T4.
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PMID:How thyroid disease presents in the elderly. 2 76

Diastolic time (DT) calculated as the cycle length minus electromechanical systole (QS2) has a nonlinear relationship to heart rate (HR), increasing rapidly as rates fall below 75. The effect of propranolol on DT was studied in 150 patients with coronary artery disease. Patients were divided into three groups. Group I included patients with stable angina pectoris: propranolol (2.5 mg, i.v.) significantly increased DT from 411 +/- 18 to 527 +/- 22 msec (p less than 0.001) in 23 patients of group I; therapy with propranolol (mean daily dose 200 +/- 15 mg) increased DT from 446 +/- 29 to 766 +/- 26 msec (p less than 0.001) in 15 patients with stable angina. Group II was made up of patients with acute myocardial infarction: Propranolol (2.5 mg, i.v.) increased DT from 379 +/- 16 to 458 +/- 24 (p less than 0.001) in 18 of these patients. Group III included patients with recent coronary bypass surgery: propranolol (2.5 mg, i.v.) increased DT from 323 +/- 9 to 468 +/- 24 msec (p less than 0.001) in 14 patients 7 days after surgery. In addition, DT at 15 hr and 2 weeks after surgery was compared in 30 patients maintained on propranolol (mean daily dose, 155 +/- 11 mg preoperative and 68 +/- 9 mg postoperative) and 50 other patients who underwent coronary bypass surgery not on propranolol. DT was greater in propranolol patients (546 +/- 21 vs. 388 +/- 16 msec, p less than 0.001), preoperative and 396 +/- 15 vs. 320 +/- 12 msec, p less than 0.001, postoperative). Changes in DT after propranolol are mainly attributed to decreased HR. Changes in QS2 were much less profound and always less (p less than 0.01) than changes in DT. Thus propranolol significantly increased DT per beat in patients with coronary artery disease, which allowed more time for coronary perfusion; this effect of propranolol could well be as important as the reduction of myocardial oxygen consumption.
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PMID:Increased diastolic time: a possible important factor in the benefical effect of propranolol in patients with coronary artery disease. 9 7

Coronary haemodynamic and metabolic effects of propranolol and glyceryl trinitrate were studied in 12 patients with coronary artery disease and 5 without coronary heart disease, at rest and during tachycardia stress. Propranolol-associated reductions in indices of myocardial oxygen demand, left ventricle work, tension time, and left ventricle oxygen utilisation (LVVO2) were reversed when heart rate was controlled by atrial pacing. Adding glyceryl trinitrate at rest also restored heart rate but decreased the left ventricular work index and tension time index as coronary resistance declined paradoxically. Tachycardia-related increases in tension time index and LVVO2 were unchanged after propranolol, and ischaemia (angina, ST depression, and reduced lactate extraction) was not altered in most of the patients. During tachycardia, the addition of glyceryl trinitrate decreased the tension time index and LVVO2; angina recurred in only 4 patients, and ST depression and lactate extraction improved. Similar haemodynamic changes occurred in the patients with normal coronary arteries. In contrast with propranolol administered alone, propranolol plus glyceryl trinitrate enhances tachycardia tolerance and prevents tachycardia-induced manifestations of ischaemia. This action is attributed to glyceryl trinitrate-associated improvement in the adequacy of myocardial perfusion.
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PMID:Coronary and myocardial metabolic effects of combined glyceryl trinitrate and propranolol administration. Observations in patients with and without coronary disease. 10 30

One thousand forty-five spontaneous episodes of S-T segment elevation were observed in three patients over a total of 72 days of continuous electrocardiographic monitoring. Eighty-nine percent of episodes were asymptomatic; chest pain tended to occur with episodes longer than 3 minutes, and ventricular ectopy occurred almost exclusively with symptomatic episodes. Nitroglycerin regularly relieved angina or S-T elevation, or both. Plasma and urinary catecholamines and their metabolites were normal. Episodes of variant angina were not associated with a generalized increase in sympathetic outflow because serum catecholamine levels at the onset and termination of the S-T abnormalities were not elevated. Controlled trials of propranolol showed no significant beneficial effect. Propranolol significantly increased the length of episodes of S-T elevation in one patient, increasing ventricular irritability. The overall course of variant angina was quite variable, with spontaneous and long-lasting remissions, necessitating cautions interpretation of clinical trials.
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PMID:Variant angina pectoris: investigation of indexes of sympathetic nervous system function. 10 89

The effects of propranolol, digoxin and combination therapy (/D) on the resting and exercise ECG were studied in ten normal subjects and 20 patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) given a sequence of oral placebo, propranolol, P/D, digoxin and placebo, for two week periods. Digoxin produced a significant decrease in T-wave amplitude and often resulted in ST segment depression in the resting ECG. Propranolol, digoxin, and P/D tended to decrease the QTc interval and prolong the PR interval. However, CAD patients were more sensitive to PR prolongation than normals while receiving propranolol or digoxin alone. Propranolol therapy did not significantly affect the ST segment of the exercise ECG in the normal subjects or the CAD patients without an ischemic control exercise ECG. By contrast, 50 per cent of the normal subjects developed "false-positive" ischemic ST segment responses to exercise while receiving digoxin of P/D and three of eight CAD patients without ischemic control exercise ST segments had a similar response to digoxin or P/D. In 12 CAD patients with ischemic control exercise ST segments, propranolol did not affect the amount of ST segment depression at the onset of angina or the maximum amount of ST segment depression. Digoxin or P/D both uniformly increased the maximum amount of ST segment depression which was greater with digoxin than P/D. However, the maximum heart rate on P/D was significantly reduced as compared to that on digoxin. It is concluded that (1) CAD patients are more sensitive to propranolol or digoxin-induced AV block than normals, (2) propranolol does not change the magnitude of ischemic exercise ST segment depression, (3) digoxin increases ischemic exercise ST segment depression and results in a high incidence of false-positive exercise tests, and (4) the addition of propranolol to digoxin attenuates the effects of digoxin on the exercise ST segment.
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PMID:The effects of oral propranolol, digoxin and combination therapy on the resting and exercise electrocardiogram. 31 42

Beta-adrenergic blocking agents are widely used to treat disorders of cardiac rhythm and rate, angina, and hypertension. Propranolol is the most widely used beta-adrenergic blocking agent in this country. Because of its nonselective beta-adrenergic blocking effect, propranolol may be associated with significant bronchoconstriction in asthmatic subjects and in some patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Since tolamolol, a new beta-adrenergic blocking agent, has cardioselectivity in animals, we studied asthmatic subjects for six hours on three separate days in a double-blind crossover comparison of oral therapy with 40 mg of propranolol, its beta-adrenergic blocking equivalent dose of tolamolol (50 mg), and a high dose of tolamolol (100 mg). All three dosages had equipotent effects on heart rate and systolic pressure. The 50-mg dose of tolamolol had no effect on pulmonary function over six hours; however, both propranolol (40 mg) and the 100-mg dose of tolamolol had equivalent deleterious effects on airway resistance and on rates of expiratory flow. We conclude that the cardioselectivity of tolamolol is dose-limited but is present at the dosage of 50 mg, which is equivalent to the usual antiarrhythmic beta-adrenergic blocking dose of propranolol (40 mg).
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PMID:Beta-adrenergic blockade of the lung. Dose-dependent cardioselectivity of tolamolol in asthma. 35 May 12

The pathophysiology of angina pectoris is best understood as an imbalance between oxygen supply and demand. The primary determinants of myocardial oxygen demand are heart rate, arterial pressure, heart size, myocardial contractility, and myocardial mass. The medical therapy of angina pectoris is directed toward reducing myocardial oxygen demand by reducing the workload of the heart and the specific determinants listed. The most common medications used in the treatment of angina pectoris are nitroglycerin and propranolol. Nitroglycerin reduces myocardial oxygen demand primarily by reducing heart size and arterial pressure. Propranolol reduces oxygen demand primarily by reducing heart rate. Medical therapy is generally effective in controlling the symptoms of angina pectoris in 80% or more of the patients and allows them to lead useful and productive lives.
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PMID:Medical therapy of angina pectoris. 41 39

In a series of 200 cases of unstable angina who have had coronary arteriography carried out, a stenosis of more than 60% of the trunk of the left coronary artery was noted in 40 cases (20%). This sinister site of arteriosclerosis may be suspected in patients presenting with long-standing angina (mean for the group 44 months), an angina which has recently become worse, one which is not responding rapidly to rest and beta-blockers, and in particular one where there has been a previous infarction (50% of cases). Coronary arteriography shows that the lesions were more diffuse and more severe in the group with stenosis of the main trunk. Surgical prognosis becomes worse (31% mortality) because of the risk of vascular complications. Treatment by large doses of Propranolol improves the classically gloomy prognosis of these patients when treated medically.
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PMID:[Are stenoses of the common trunk of the left coronary artery at the root of unstable angina?]. 41 69

Thirteen patients with Prinzmetal's variant angina performed treadmill exercise tests in the early morning and in the afternoon of the same day. The attacks with ST elevation were induced repeatedly in all 13 patients in the early morning, but in only two patients in the afternoon. Propranolol did not suppress the exercise-induced attacks in all 13 patients. Diltiazem suppressed the attacks in all 13 patients and phentolamine in eight of the nine patients. Coronary arteriograms demonstrated that spasm occluding completely or almost completely the large coronary artery supplying the area of myocardium showing ST elevation appeared during the attacks and disappeared along with the attacks after nitroglycerin administration in all four patients in whom the attacks were induced by arm exercise in the catheterization laboratory. We conclude that there is circadian variation of exercise capacity in patients with Prinzmetal's variant angina caused by coronary arterial spasm induced by exercise in the early morning but not in the afternoon.
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PMID:Circadian variation of exercise capacity in patients with Prinzmetal's variant angina: role of exercise-induced coronary arterial spasm. 42 6


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