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)

This review summarizes the available medical literature about plasma norepinephrine, which as been used as an indicator of sympathetic neural activity in clinical cardiology. Plasma norepinephrine levels are elevated myocardial infarction and congestive heart failure, and the norepinephrine concentration varies with severity of disease. Patients with ischemic heart disease at rest show essentially normal plasma norepinephrine, but no studies have assessed norepinephrine levels during spontaneously occurring typical angina pectoris. Plasma norepinephrine also is increased during hypertension occurring after coronary bypass surgery or repair of aortic coarctation. Propranolol increases plasma norepinephrine, and acute withdrawal of propranolol does not. Sodium restriction increases plasma norepinephrine in healthy persons, but no information is available about its effect on patients with congestive heart failure. Insufficient data are available to make strong inferences about sympathetic activity in cardiomyopathy, essential hypertension or pulmonary hypertension, and little or no information is available about plasma norepinephrine in ventricular fibrillation without myocardial infarction, the mitral valve prolapse syndrome, digoxin effect, syndromes associated with prolonged electrocardiographic Q-T interval and the hyperkinetic heart syndrome.
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PMID:Plasma norepinephrine as an indicator of sympathetic neural activity in clinical cardiology. 617 Nov 57

The effect of propranolol on hypotonic erythrocyte hemolysis was investigated in normal subjects and coronary patients. In the latter, erythrocytes were shown to have much smaller osmotic stability as compared to the former. Propranolol's in vitro antihemolyzing effect is more pronounced in patients with acute myocardial infarction and angina pectoris as compared to normal subjects. antihemolyzing effect of propranolol is reduced if it is preceded by the administration of beta-adrenoblockers in myocardial infarction. It is suggested that propranolol's antihemolyzing effect be used for the assessment of beta-adrenoreceptor function.
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PMID:[Determination of the sensitivity of beta adrenergic receptors in patients with myocardial infarction]. 631 19

Exercise thallium-201 perfusion scans and gated equilibrium blood pool scans were performed in 120 catheterized patients with a chest pain syndrome. Eighty-six patients had coronary artery disease and 34 patients did not. The effects of gender, propranolol, exercise level, exercise ischemia, history of typical angina, history of previous myocardial infarction, electrocardiographic Q waves, number of diseases vessels and extent of coronary artery obstruction on diagnostic accuracy were evaluated. The overall sensitivity and specificity of thallium scans were 76 and 68%, respectively, and those of gated blood pool scans 80 and 62% (p = not significant). Propranolol decreased the specificity of thallium scans (propranolol = 42%; no propranolol = 87%, p less than 0.05). Thallium scans and anginal history were less sensitive for detecting coronary disease in women (men: thallium = 79%; angina = 77%; women: 54 and 46%, respectively; p less than 0.05). Exercise level did not significantly affect the diagnostic accuracy of either scan. Thallium and gated scans were both highly sensitive (95%) in detecting disease in 20 patients with a prior myocardial infarction, angina and a positive electrocardiogram. The sensitivity of the thallium scan significantly decreased as the number of diseased vessels decreased. Both thallium and gated scans were less frequently positive in patients with atypical angina or no Q waves, but were not significantly influenced by electrocardiographic ischemia. The sensitivity and specificity of both scans were low in 57 patients with the combination of atypical angina, no history of infarction and equivocal stress electrocardiogram thallium = 61 and 63%, respectively; gated = 61 and 67%). When stress thallium scan evaluation included the electrocardiogram and thallium scan interpretation, the diagnostic accuracy was 81%. When all the information from gated scans (wall motion, ejection fraction, pulmonary blood volume) was combined for final gated scan evaluation, the diagnostic accuracy was 83%. When electrocardiographic data were added to all three gated scan variables, diagnostic accuracy was 77%. In conclusion, thallium perfusion and gated blood pool scans have reasonable diagnostic accuracy for coronary artery disease in a group of patients with a moderately high prevalence of disease. However, combined variables from each test are needed to provide reliable diagnostic accuracy.
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PMID:Comparison of exercise perfusion and ventricular function imaging: an analysis of factors affecting the diagnostic accuracy of each technique. 631 68

Experiments with isolated perfused hearts of guinea pigs and rats showed that cardiac action is linked to formation of prostaglandinlike substances (PLS) and prostacyclin (PGI2). Perfusion of the hearts with arachidonic acid or pretreatment with a linoleic-acid-supplemented diet significantly increased the content of PLS and PGI2 and exerted an economic effect on the heart performance. Dipyridamole induced a marked increase in the coronary flow and PGI2 formation of the hearts but decreased the enhanced myocardial PGI2 biosynthesis after perfusion with arachidonic acid. Propranolol also caused a rise in PGI2 efflux but did not show any influence on PGI2 formation after arachidonic acid. Dipyridamole and propranolol prevent decreased PGI2 formation after acetylsalicylic acid, supporting the view that a combination of these drugs exerts a preventive effect in patients with angina pectoris and heart infarction.
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PMID:Myocardial biosynthesis of prostaglandins with special consideration of prostacyclin and the influence of dipyridamole and propranolol. 634 66

Propranolol (240 mg daily) and verapamil (360 mg daily) were objectively compared for their respective efficacy in the treatment of chronic stable angina pectoris. Twenty-two patients were studied in a randomized placebo controlled, double-blind crossover trial with 4 weeks on each active drug treatment. Multistage treadmill exercise with computer-assisted ECG analysis was performed after 2 weeks on placebo and at the end of each 4-week active drug treatment. The mean exercise time to produce angina was 5.5 minutes (SEM +/- 0.4 minutes) on placebo and this increased to 7.8 (+/- 0.5) minutes on propranolol and 9.1 (+/- 0.5) minutes on verapamil. The improvement in exercise time of verapamil over propranolol was statistically significant (p less than 0.01). Ten patients became free of angina with verapamil and four with propranolol. Resting and maximal exercise heart rates were significantly reduced by propranolol; verapamil did not reduce the maximal heart rate but reduced the resting heart rate slightly. However, the heart rate increase per minute of exercise was significantly diminished (p less than 0.001). ST segment changes showed improvement with both drugs despite marked differences in heart rate profile. The overall efficacy of the slow calcium channel blocker, verapamil, compares favorably with that of a standard beta-adrenoreceptor blocking drug (propranolol), thus providing a new perspective in the management of angina pectoris. These two classes of drugs seem to act by different mechanisms and it is suggested that if patients are resistant or intolerant to one of these drugs, the other can be used to yield a beneficial response.
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PMID:Double-blind randomized crossover trial of verapamil and propranolol in chronic stable angina. 635 43

Long-acting propranolol (Inderal LA) is a new formulation of propranolol that allows release of the drug in a controlled manner, so that the plasma concentration at 24 hr after dosing is greater with long-acting propranolol than with conventional tablets. A single dose of 160 mg of long-acting propranolol can produce cardiac beta-adrenoceptor blockade throughout a 24 hr period without variability due to multiple peak concentrations. It has been shown that this formulation is as effective in the treatment of angina pectoris, hypertension and hyperthyroidism as the standard formulation. Studies with long-acting propranolol in cardiac dysrhythmias are lacking. This new dosage form would be a means of simplifying dosing regimens and thereby hopefully enhancing patient convenience and compliance.
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PMID:Long-acting propranolol (Inderal LA): pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and therapeutic use. 636 3

Effort angina is the result of acute myocardial ischemia on exercise due to an imbalance between myocardial oxygen demand and supply. During exercise, ischemia is provoked by an increase in myocardial oxygen needs (tachycardia, increased blood pressure, etc.) which cannot be met by increased coronary blood flow. The commonest cause of insufficient flow is coronary atherosclerosis. Coronary spasm does, however, play a role, whether it occurs during exercise on normal or atheromatous coronary vessels. Classical anti-anginal therapy is directed towards a reduction in the intense adrenergic activity associated with exercise, and to the limitation of myocardial oxygen consumption. Calcium inhibitors which cause peripheral vasodilation, decrease ventricular wall tension and coronary resistance, are usually reserved for unstable or resistant angina. We studied 10 patients with stable effort angina for over 2 years with significant (greater than 70 per cent) atheromatous lesions on coronary angiography unsuitable for surgical treatment. The patients underwent a randomised double blind trial to compare the effects of propranolol, diltiazem and placebo. Exercise ECG was performed after a treatment period of one week, 3 hours after drug administration. The results showed a significant improvement of work capacity with propranolol and diltiazem as compared to placebo. Propranolol (160 mg/day) was more effective than diltiazem (180 mg/day) in 6 patients. In 4 cases, the improvement with diltiazem and propranolol was the same. The association of the two drugs in one open study in 5 patients was even more effective in 3 patients. The small number of patients studied makes it impossible to draw any firm conclusions. Although calcium inhibitors are the treatment of choice in coronary spasm and betablockers in effort angina, diltiazem exerts an anti-anginal effect by reduction of myocardial oxygen consumption without depression of myocardial contractility, as other workers have shown.
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PMID:[Are calcium inhibitors useful in the treatment of effort angina pectoris]. 640 53

Propranolol is an effective drug for patients with angina and has been shown to favorably alter exercise ejection fraction and myocardial perfusion images in patients with coronary disease. A characteristic effect of propranolol is reduction in exercise heart rate (HR). Twenty men with coronary disease (10 with prior infarction), angina-limited exercise tests, abnormal myocardial blood flow distribution images (MBFDI) (201thallium) during exercise, and normal resting ejection fractions underwent treadmill exercise testing with imaging on three occasions. Control maximal exercise was performed initially with measurement of MBFDI. Propranolol, 40 mg by mouth four times a day, was administered for a week with exercise repeated to the same workload. A third study, with men off propranolol, was undertaken with exercise continued only to the HR obtained while the men were taking propranolol (submaximal exercise). All men had improvement in MBFDI while receiving propranolol (men without infarction +780 +/- 88 [average +/- SEM] normalized count rate difference between control and propranolol; men with infarction +724 +/- 73 normalized counts). Greater count differences were noted when control exercise and HR-controlled, submaximal exercise MBFDI were compared with a greater difference in men with infarction (+1094 +/- 89 normalized counts) than for men without infarction (+896 +/- 88 normalized counts). Results suggest that propranolol improves MBFDI during exercise in men with angina, but that submaximal exercise results in more normal MBFDI than does propranolol for exercise to the same HR.
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PMID:Thallium-201 myocardial imaging during maximal and submaximal exercise: comparison of submaximal exercise with propranolol. 665 Mar 57

Beta-adrenergic blocking agents, nitrates and calcium channel antagonists are effective in treating angina pectoris, but much remains unknown about how they act in combination. Consequently, treadmill exercise was used to assess the relative efficacy of nifedipine or isosorbide dinitrate, or both, in 19 patients with stable angina receiving propranolol. Propranolol therapy was continued and either placebo, nifedipine (20 mg), isosorbide dinitrate (20 mg) or both drugs were given randomly 1 1/2 hours before exercise in a double-blind trial. In 16 patients who completed the protocol, heart rate at rest during propranolol therapy was 53.7 +/- 1.9 beats/min (mean +/- standard error of the mean); it increased 4.6 +/- 1.2 beats/min with the addition of nifedipine (p less than 0.01), but was unchanged with isosorbide dinitrate or both combined. Compared with values during treatment with propranolol alone, systolic blood pressure at rest decreased with each vasodilator individually and when combined. Rate-pressure product at maximal exercise was the same with all combinations. Exercise duration was 467 +/- 50 seconds with propranolol, increased to 556 +/- 47 seconds with isosorbide dinitrate (p less than 0.05) and to 636 +/- 50 seconds with nifedipine (p less than 0.001). Exercise duration with all three drugs was 597 +/- 47 seconds (p less than 0.01 compared with propranolol alone). The improvement with nifedipine was greater than with isosorbide dinitrate (p less than 0.05) but exercise duration was not significantly different with the combination of these drugs than when either drug was used alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:"Maximal" drug therapy is not necessarily optimal in chronic angina pectoris. 670 42

Nine patients with stable angina (group 1) underwent maximal treadmill stress testing and thallium-201 (201T1) myocardial scintigraphy after intravenous propranolol hydrochloride, and after placebo. Though seven of the nine patients exercised longer after propranolol than after placebo, this difference did not reach statistical significance. Propranolol, however, significantly reduced the mean maximum rate pressure product. Comparison of the perfusion scans on and off propranolol showed that in 36 out of 90 of the myocardial segments recorded (nine patients, five segments scanned twice per patient), only one of the scans showed a defect. In 24 out of 36 of these the propranolol scan was negative, the defect appearing in the placebo scan. Defects present on both scans but differing significantly in size occurred in 22 out of 54 view pairs (nine patients, three views after exercise and three views after redistribution on propranolol and on placebo), and in 19 of these the smaller defect was seen in the propranolol scan. In one of the nine patients, the propranolol scan was normal (false negative), whereas defects corresponding to angiographically proven coronary artery lesions were seen on the placebo scan. Six patients (group 2) were maximally exercised after propranolol and then re-exercised to the same rate pressure product on placebo. Again 16 out of 60 of the segment pairs disagreed and in 10 of these the unmatched defect was present on the placebo scan. In 10 out of 14 discrepant view pairs, the smaller defect occurred on the propranolol scan. Thus in patients taking propranolol, negative results do not exclude coronary artery disease, and perfusion defects (if present) though accurately reflecting the presence of disease may underestimate its true extent.
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PMID:Effect of beta adrenergic blockade on thallium-201 myocardial perfusion imaging. 682 15


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