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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (
angina
)
21,142
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Preview In most patients with stable
angina pectoris
, symptoms can be controlled successfully with drug therapy. Revascularization procedures should be
reserved
for those at high risk for cardiac events and those who do not respond to optimal therapy with any of the three classes of antianginal agents. In this article, the authors describe tailoring of medical therapy on the basis of concomitant disease, outcome of risk stratification, and response to individual agents.
...
PMID:Chronic stable angina pectoris. 2922 40
Myocardial revascularization in patients with stable ischemic heart disease aims at eliminating myocardial ischemia, in order to (i) relieve anginal symptoms; (ii) improve functional capacity; and, possibly, (iii) improve prognosis. Given that ischemic recurrences are relatively common in patients undergoing myocardial revascularization, an appropriate follow-up is needed as part of a secondary prevention program. Stress testing can be here useful to: (i) detect residual or recurrent ischemia/
angina
; (ii) define functional capacity in order to establish physical aerobic training individualized programs; (iii) stratify prognosis. These goals can in large part be achieved by the ECG stress test, by far the cheapest, the easiest to perform and the most accessible test among those proposed so far, particularly compared with other imaging stress test modalities. There is, however, considerable discrepancy among scientific society recommendations on the use, timing and methods of ECG stress testing and of stress testing in general after revascularization. In addition to the diversity of recommendations, the use of stress tests in general is extremely variable in current clinical practice.This review aims therefore at revisiting principles, advantages and limitations of the ECG stress test and of stress tests in general in revascularized patients, highlighting recent developments of the ECG stress technique. This should also aim at issuing new recommendations to avoid the inappropriate prescription of expensive and more cumbersome techniques, to be
reserved
only to a second-tier diagnostic level and in a minority of cases.
...
PMID:[Usefulness, timing and modality of ECG stress testing after myocardial revascularization]. 3052 Aug 83
Coronary artery disease has shown a dramatic increase worldwide. According to the current guidelines, optimal medical therapy (OMT) is recommended as the first-line treatment for stable
angina
; with revascularisation being
reserved
for those with persistent or progressive symptoms despite intensive medical therapy. We report the case of a young man with stable
angina
, who was advised percutaneous coronary intervention for stenosis of left anterior descending artery. As he was not willing for the same, he was treated with OMT (according to the then relevant Adult Treatment Panel (ATP) III guidelines) and therapeutic lifestyle changes, following which he became asymptomatic along with total regression of the atherosclerotic plaque on coronary angiogram. This case highlights that OMT can be an effective line of management in patients with stable
angina
; and interventions like angioplasty, stents and surgery may be
reserved
for those who do not respond adequately.
...
PMID:Total angiographic regression of coronary atherosclerosis with optimal medical therapy. 3178 May 98
Dysgeusia is the first recognized oral symptom of novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19). In this review article, we described oral lesions of COVID-19 patients. We searched PubMed library and Google Scholar for published literature since December 2019 until September 2020. Finally, we selected 35 articles including case reports, case series and letters to editor. Oral manifestations included ulcer, erosion, bulla, vesicle, pustule, fissured or depapillated tongue, macule, papule, plaque, pigmentation, halitosis, whitish areas, hemorrhagic crust, necrosis, petechiae, swelling, erythema, and spontaneous bleeding. The most common sites of involvement in descending order were tongue (38%), labial mucosa (26%) and palate (22%). Suggested diagnoses of the lesions were aphthous stomatitis, herpetiform lesions, candidiasis, vasculitis, Kawasaki-like, EM-like, mucositis, drug eruption, necrotizing periodontal disease,
angina
bullosa- like, angular cheilitis, atypical Sweet syndrome, and Melkerson-Rosenthal syndrome. Oral lesions were symptomatic in 68% of the cases. Oral lesions were nearly equal in both genders (49% female, 51% male). Patients with older age and higher severity of COVID-19 disease had more widespread and sever oral lesions. Lack of oral hygiene, opportunistic infections, stress, immunosuppression, vasculitis and hyper-inflammatory response secondary to COVID-19 are the most important predisposing factors for onset of oral lesions in COVID-19 patients. This article is protected by copyright. All rights
reserved
.
...
PMID:Oral manifestations of COVID-19 disease: A review article. 3323 23
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