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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (
angina
)
21,142
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This paper reviews current evidence from several cardiology populations that suggests panic disorder is prevalent and underdiagnosed. Cardiology patients with atypical
angina
and no heart disease have a high likelihood of having panic disorder as suggested by studies of two separate cardiology populations. That they resemble psychiatric populations with panic is suggested by their positive response to alprazolam. Although evidence is less clear concerning the relationship between
MVP
and panic, it appears that patients referred to ECHO and found to have
MVP
are also likely to have panic. Three other populations deserving further study are patients with 1) pacemaker syndrome, 2) coronary artery disease with atypical
angina
and 3) certain arrhythmias.
...
PMID:Panic disorder in cardiology patients. 218 3
Women have a notoriously high rate of false positive exercise test results. Since the exercise ST segment response has low specificity in predicting CAD in women, we examined additional exercise parameters in 200 women with a history of chest pain compatible with
angina
and having ST segment depression greater than or equal to 1 mm recorded during a Bruce treadmill test. All subsequently had coronary arteriography. Two groups were compared: group A (n = 80) with CAD (greater than or equal to 70 percent stenosis of one or more coronary artery) and group B (n = 120) with angiographically confirmed normal coronary arteries (normal or minimal placquing). The exercise criteria analyzed included: (1) chest pain during exercise, (2) percent target heart rate, (3) extent of ST shift, (4) morphology of the ST segment slope, (5) time to normalization of the ST segment, and (6) total exercise duration. Multivariate analysis (using a stepwise logistic regression model) identified four independent exercise variables associated with the likelihood of CAD: (absence of
MVP
, p = .003; exercise duration less than 5 min, p = .02; ability to reach target heart rate, p = .027; time to ST normalization greater than or equal to 6 min, p less than .001). False positive exercise test results were more likely to occur when the following exercise test variables were present: ability to exercise to stage 3 of the Bruce protocol and a rapid (less than or equal to 4 minutes) normalization of ST shift after cessation of exercise. Attention to these additional exercise variables allows more careful selection of women requiring more definitive (and expensive) testing.
...
PMID:Exercise testing in women with chest pain. Are there additional exercise characteristics that predict true positive test results? 290 29