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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (atherosclerosis)
77,401 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Coronary angiograms and treadmill stress tests were reviewed independently in 108 nonconsecutively selected cases. There were 16 patients (15%) with infarcts on ECG. Changes in R-wave amplitude and ST segments during exercise were evaluated to determine the sensitivity and specificity of each as a predictor of coronary artery disease (CAD). ST segment changes had a sensitivity of 49%, and a specificity of 74%. The sensitivity increased to 55% when infarcts were excluded. R-wave amplitude changes had a sensitivity of 68% and a specificity of 84%. The sensitivity increased to 78% when infarcts were excluded. An index formed by the sum of the change in R-wave amplitude and the magnitude of ST segment change yielded a sensitivity of 76% and specificity of 78%. The sensitivity increased to 84% when infarcts were excluded. There was no statistical difference between specificities for each criteria. Of those patients with an R-wave amplitude decrease, 69% had no coronary artery atherosclerosis, while 31% had significant lesions. Of those patients with no change or an increase in R-wave amplitude, 83% had coronary artery atherosclerosis, while 17% were normal. Of the 83% with coronary artery atherosclerosis, 81% had two and three vessel disease, while only 19% had single vessel disease. No change or an increase in R-wave amplitude during treadmill stress testing is a more reliable indicator of CAD in our laboratory than ST segment changes.
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PMID:Predicting coronary artery disease with treadmill stress testing: changes in R-wave amplitude compared with ST segment depression. 45 88

Sudden cardiac death can usually be resolved by the pathologist into ischaemic heart disease, non-vascular cardiac disease such as aortic stenosis or hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and infrequently a morphologically normal heart on naked eye examination. When ischaemic heart disease is present one third of cases have a recent occlusive coronary artery thrombosis. Two thirds of patients have coronary stenosis only; the minimum degree of disease reasonably associated with sudden death is one area of 85% stenosis. The majority of patients, however, have multiple areas of stenosis. The predominant causes of non-ischaemic sudden death are severe LV hypertrophy, hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and the prolapsing mitral valve syndrome. Where the heart and coronary arteries are morphologically normal, review of any previous ECG's, a family history and histological examination of the myocardium and conduction system may reveal a cause or at least allow a reasonable assumption of cardiac arrhythmia to be made. Sudden unexpected death where the circumstances strongly suggest a cardiac cause may pose problems for the pathologist. Ischaemic heart disease (coronary atherosclerosis) is undoubtedly the most frequent cause but even when this is so the detailed pathology is controversial. It is when coronary artery disease is conspicuously absent, often in young individuals previously in good health, that a problem exists. Sudden death in infancy (cot death) is a different entity with its own problems and is not here discussed further.
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PMID:Sudden unexpected cardiac death--a practical approach to the forensic problem. 46 29

An 86-year-old man with previous normal renal function was hospitalized because of renal insufficiency. He had a long history of atherosclerotic heart disease, mild hypertension and pulmonary embolism, requiring anticoagulant therapy. In view of the normal-sized kidneys and absence of casts in the urinary sediment, a diagnosis of atheroembolic renal disease was made. The patient's renal function deteriorated, but he refused hemodialysis. Death occurred within a few weeks. At autopsy, severe aortic atherosclerosis was observed and atheroembolic renal disease was confirmed as the cause of renal failure. Occasionally, renal failure can be the sole manifestation of spontaneous atheroembolic disease. This possibility should be considered if the physician is called upon to establish the diagnosis when renal insufficiency develops in atherosclerotic patients.
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PMID:"Spontaneous" atheroembolic disease as a cause of renal failure in the elderly. 46 53

Histochemical studies of architectonics and mediator activity of cholinergic and adrenergic nerve plexuses in the myocardium of the auricles and right atrii of the heart were carried out. Both autopsy and biopsy materials: parts of right atrii from patient with congenital and rheumatic defects and atherosclerosis of the coronary arteries, were used. Age changes in the nerve plexus were found to include a decrease in the activity of acetylcholinesterase and the content of catecholamines followed by decreased density of the plexus itself. Perivascular fibrosis combined with changes of afferent and adrenergic elements was revealed. Coronary artery atherosclerosis enhances and aggravates functional and structural changes of cholinergic and adrenergic components of the nervous apparatus of the heart associated with age. Congenital heart diseases are accompanied by decreasing density of adrenergic nerve plexuses and decreased content of catecholamines in them, and rheumatic diseases by destruction of cholinergic and adrenergic components.
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PMID:[Age-related changes in the cholinergic and adrenergic nerve elements of the human heart and their status in cardiovascular pathology]. 51 65

The distribution and severity of coronary disease in 500 patients with angina pectoris and at least one area of 50% or greater reduction of luminal diameter in a major coronary artery were compared with respect to patients' age and coronary arterial pattern. The coronary arterial patterns were separated into right (360 patients), mixed (89 patients), and left (51 patients) systems, depending upon the blood supply to the inferior surface of the left ventricle. The following relationships were noted: 1) In patients with angina pectoris, the distribution and severity of coronary artery disease is similar from the third to eighth decade. 2) Coronary arterial stenoses of 50-70% of greater reduction of luminal diameter involve most frequently the proximal portion of the major vessels. Coronary artery disease is multivessel in nature in 80% of cases. In single vessel disease the left anterior descending artery is involved most frequently. 3) The left main coronary artery is moderately to severely obstructed less frequently in individuals with left (2%) as compared to right (8%) and mixed (10%) systems. Otherwise, the distribution of coronary artery disease is similar in right, mixed, and left systems. 4) Coronary artery disease is a diffuse rather than a focal process. As demonstrated by coronary arteriography, patients with coronary artery disease have smaller vessels throughout the arterial tree as compared with individuals free of evident coronary atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Distribution and severity of coronary artery disease in 500 patients with angina pectoris. 52 35

The 6-year cumulative incidence of ischemic heart disease (IHD) in 382 dialysis patients (mean age [SEM], 43 +/- 0.7 years) was studied. Of 101 patients with IHD, only 39 developed symptoms following dialysis (cumulative incidence, 20.8%). This group was older than those with IHD, and in 55%, IHD occurred in the first year of dialysis. Analysis by sex and race showed the rate of IHD in men and women to be similar, but the rate in whites was twice that in blacks. In men, the rate was not different from nondialysis men with similar coronary risk factors, whereas in dialysis women, the rate was twice that of nondialysis cohort. The development of IHD did not adversely affect long-term survival in patients without prior evidence of IHD. Death from myocardial infarction occurred in 3 of 320 patients ar risk. Atuopsy data in 33 patients revealed 70% stenosis of coronary arteries in 7, 4 of whom had antecedent disease. Our major conclusions are (a) the incidence of IHD during dialysis was not different from similarly matched nondialysis subjects; (b) the rate of IHD in dialysis women was greater than it was in nondialysis subjects; (c) coronary artery disease only affected long-term survival of patients with preexisting disease; (d) autopsy data did not suggest accelerated atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Ischemic heart disease in patients with uremia undergoing maintenance hemodialysis. 54 4

One hundred eighteen patients with idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis were studied with cardiac catheterization and coronary arteriography. In 112 a gradient across the left ventricular outflow tract was present in the resting state. Seventeen of the 61 patients who had right heart catheterization had a mild resting gradient across the right ventricular outflow tract, that was considered clinically and hemodynamically insignificant. Ninety-five patients (80 percent) had a left ventricular end-diastolic pressure greater than 10 mm Hg; 60 percent had mitral regurgitation that was of mild degree in most cases. Almost 20 percent had coexistent coronary atherosclerosis (25 percent incidence rate in subjects aged 40 years or older). Patients with associated severe coronary atherosclerosis had a lower intraventricular gradient at rest than other patients. Coronary atherosclerosis appears to be a coincidental condition. The need for objective evaluation of the coronary circulation is emphasized.
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PMID:Hemodynamics and coronary angiography in idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis. 56

The acute effect of 1 g oral ascorbic acid on serum fibrinolytic activity was studied in 40 adult males. In Group I (healthy adults) administration of ascorbic acid raised the serum level by about 71%, while the fibrinolytic activity increased to a peak of 137% at 6 h. In patients with CAD (Group II) an essentially similar increase in FA was observed. In Group III, simultaneous administration of ascorbic acid with 100 g fat effectively prevented a fall in fibrinolytic activity and actually raised it by 64% above the fasting level.
Atherosclerosis 1978 Aug
PMID:Acute effect of ascorbic acid on fibrinolytic activity. 56 76

Between September 1966 and September 1976, a group of 48 patients with normal coronary arteries or nonsignificant coronary atherosclerosis documented in a first coronary arteriogram underwent a second angiogram because of persistent or recurrent chest pain. The interval between studies was 13 to 108 months (mean 42 months). The indication for the first angiogram was typical or atypical anginal pain. The patients were separated into two groups according to the results of the first angiogram. Group I included 22 patients, 9 men and 13 women, with normal coronary arteries (mean age 49 years, range 28 to 62). Group II included 26 patients, 18 men and 8 women, with coronary stenosis of less than 50% of intraluminal diameter (mean age 49 years, range 38 to 63). The second angiogram revealed normal coronary arteries in all 22 patients in Group I but showed progression of diseases in 7 (27%) of the 26 patients in group II. The coronary arterial narrowings were greater than 50% in four patients and greater than 70% in only two patients. The clinical course, coronary risk factors and interval between angiograms were not useful predictors of progression of disease. The data suggest that coronary artery disease is unlikely to developed in adults with normal coronary arteries and that roughly 75% of adults with nonsignificant atherosclerosis will not show progression of disease over a 3 to 4 year period.
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PMID:Angiographic evaluation of the natural history of normal coronary arteries and mild coronary atherosclerosis. 62 15

Myocardial imaging following the intracoronary injection of radiolabeled particles is used to identify transmural scars in patients being evaluated for coronary atherosclerosis. Selective imaging of the microcirculation derived from each major coronary vessel is accomplished using a dual radionuclide technique. This report illustrates the various normal and abnormal imaging patterns encountered in patients with coronary artery disease. The regional myocardial nomenclature proposed by the American Heart Association Council on Cardiovascular Surgery is used. Correlation of the nuclear study with the contrast arteriogram and ventriculogram is essential for identifying both transmural scars and regions of collateral circulation. The procedure is safe and can be performed during routine coronary angiography.
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PMID:Intracoronary myocardial perfusion imaging: patterns in patients with coronary artery disease. 65 75


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