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

Coronary ostial stenosis is a cause of angina pectoris and sudden death. It is due mainly to atherosclerosis, syphilis, and iatrogenic disease. The last is of growing importance because of the frequency of coronary arteriography and surgical procedures on the aortic valve. Since both may cause stenosis of the coronary ostia, these procedures raise the topic from an obscure morphologic entity to an important consideration in the treatment of cardiac disease. We describe a case of ostial stenosis that was complicated by coronary arteriography.
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PMID:Coronary ostial stenosis complicating coronary arteriography. 108 40

The following effects in treatment of coronary artery disease are desired: 1. Elimination or improvement of angina. 2. Improvement of physical capacity. 3. Prevention of imminent complications (myocardial infarct, cardiac arrhythmias, heart failure, embolism). 4. Elimination or diminuation of risk factors. 5. Prolongation of life. - In a critical survey concerning long-term studies of patients with aorto-coronary bypass or medical treatment in the literature subtile lists of indications for surgical and conservative treatment are put up (Table II and III), illustrated by case reports. - Useful criteria for diagnosis, follow-up, and prognosis are selective coronary angiography, ventriculography as well as determination of the coronary reserve (Argon Method). Indication for aorto-coronary bypass and resection of myocardial aneurysms are presented. Principles of medical treatment are: 1. Diminuation of myocardial oxygen requirement (release of pressure, economisation of work load, recompensation, regulation of arrhythmias) and 2. improvement of myocardial oxygen supply (Diminuation of coronary perfusion resistance including prevention and treatment of atherosclerosis). Indication for various medications are discussed (nitrites, beta-adrenergic blocking agents and antihypertensive drugs, glycosides, medication for arrhythmias, coronary dilatators, anticoagulants, and lipotropic substances). Their mode of action is debated and documented by own results. Present possibilities and limits in treatment of coronary artery disease are presented.
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PMID:[Indications for surgical and medical treatment of coronary artery disease (author's transl)]. 108 41

A detailed pathological study was made in 10 patients dying up to 13 months after aortocoronary saphenous vein bypass grafting for coronary atherosclerosis. The coronary arteries and vein grafts were investigated by injection with a radio-opaque mass, radiography, dissection, and histology. The report is to some extent historical since the patients died during a period when the operation was first being introduced into two cardiothoracic hospitals. About 80 operations were performed during the time the 10 deaths occurred, a mortality of 12-5 per cent (including cases followed up to 13 months after operation). Seven of the patients were operated on for intractable angina and 3 with a view to aneurysmectomy. All the patients selected for operation were severely disabled despite medical treatment. The main cause of death was extremely severe coronary artery disease and its effects on the left ventricle; in one case, over two-thirds of the left ventricle had been destroyed by infarction before operation. Other causes or contributing causes of death were pulmonary embolism, myocardial infarction complicating angiography (ostial stenosis), and cerebral damage. Ten of the 14 vein grafts (71%) were patent at necropsy. A free flow of injection medium usually occurred between patent grafts and coronary arteries. Thrombosis of a graft was thought to have contributed to death in 3 patients, but not in a fourth who died of pulmonary embolism. Since thrombosis of grafts was usually secondary to poor run-off blood into severely atheromatous coronary arteries, this was also an indirect effect of the advanced coronary arterial disease. In one case, thrombosis followed severe chronic intimal thickening of a graft in place for 13 months. The study of these deaths emphasizes that in some patients the pathological changes in the coronary arteries and left ventricle are too severe for them to benefit from surgery. Vein grafts cannot be expected to distribute blood effectively through grossly narrowed coronary arteries. In addition, when a large part of the left ventricle is infarcted or scarred, it is almost certain that improving the blood supply by grafting will not result in significant regeneration of cardiac muscle. Since the time when this study was made, there have been few deaths among the many vein graft operations subsequently carried out in the hospitals involved. The two most important factors thought responsible for the improvement are the selection of cases more suitable for surgery by continued improvement of diagnostic techniques, and also the employment of more radical surgical procedures in the form of coronary endarterectomy and the insertion of more grafts per patient.
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PMID:Pathology of hearts after aortocoronary saphenous vein bypass grafting for coronary artery disease, studied by post-mortem coronary angiography. 108 91

Myocardial revascularization surgery has proved most effective in relieving angina pectoris. Its influence on the survival of patients with coronary atherosclerosis, however, remains a contentious subject and one which may not be finally settled for years. The follow-up results of the first 196 patients to undergo direct coronary artery surgery at the Prince Henry Hospital support those who claim increased longevity as one of its benefits.
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PMID:The influence of surgery on survival of patients with angina. 108 52

Hypothyroidism is associated with severe coronary atherosclerosis. In spite of this the reported incidence of angina pectoris and myocardial infarction in untreated hypothyroidism is small. Since many authors consider the formation of a thrombus in coronary arteries to be the final event of the process which leads to myocardial infarction, changes in the platelet function may explain the paradoxical rarity of myocardial infarction in untreated hypothyroidism. To evaluate this hypothesis, platelet adhesiveness has been estimated before and after treatment in 9 hypothyroid and 16 thyrotoxic patients. In thyrotoxicosis the platelet adhesiveness was significantly increased, but decreased to normal after treatment. In hypothyroidism platelet adhesiveness was abnormally low but increased to normal value after thyroid hormone replacement. This may be an important factor in precipitating myocardial infarction in patients with hypothyroidism and coronary artery atherosclerosis.
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PMID:The adhesiveness of human blood platelets and thyroid function. 112 57

Measurement of the sinus node recovery time has been proposed as a diagnostic tool for recognition of the sick sinus syndrome. The latter is most frequently encountered in elderly patients with hypertension, coronary heart disease, and atherosclerosis. In order to provide normal values for the sinus node recovery time in this particular population group, atrial pacing studies were carried out in 30 subjects over 50 years of age, all with peripheral vascular disease and some with angina pectoris (10), residua of infarction (6), or hypertension (7). On stimulation, 7 patients maintained a I:I atrioventricular conduction up to the rate of 180/min. Second degree atrioventricular block developed in all other cases. On six occasions, Wenckebach's periods appeared at the relatively slow pacing rate of 120/min. The maximum postoverdrive pause ranged from 680 to 1600 ms with an average of 1100 ms plus or minus 190 (10). For each pacing speed, a correlation was found between the duration of the pause and the control intrinsic cardiac rate, longer pauses being associated with longer resting PP intervals. Beyond 120/min, the duration of the pause was seen to shorten progressively as the driving rate was increased. Finally, the behavior of the sinus node pacemaker following interruption of pacing showed individual variations. After pacing at relatively slow rates, a prompt return to near control values was consistently observed, whereas, after fast rates of driving, a phase of secondary depression developed in about one-half of the studied cases.
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PMID:Sinus node recovery time in the elderly. 112 18

Maximal exercise tests and angiographic evaluations were obtained in a group of patients before and after myocardial revascularization. Patients were classified on the basis of angiography and operative records. Two primary groups of 33 patients with complete revascularization and 95 patients with postoperative residual ischemia were studied. The residual ischemia subgroups included patients with partial revascularization, progressive coronary atherosclerosis, or graft failure. Patients with complete revascularization had statistically significant improvements in work capacity, maximal heart rate, maximal rate-pressure products, abnormal exercise electrocardiograms, exercise-induced angina pectoris, and atrial gallop sounds. A spectrum of lesser improvements in these measurements was observed in the subgroups with residual ischemia. Total graft failure resulted in no significant improvements in exercise-test parameters. Maximal stress tests provide a useful adjunct to routine clinical follow-up of myocardial revascularization patients. Myocardial revascularization is associated with significant patient palliation as determined by serial stress testing.
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PMID:The spectrum of exercise test and angiographic correlations in myocardial revascularization surgery. 115 27

A rare case of telangiectatic communication between the conal branch of the left coronary artery and the pulmonary trunk in a 50-year-old woman is reported. Unusual features included the presence of clear-cut angina on effort, unstable auscultatory findings and a RSR' pattern in lead V1, probably related to concommitant diffuse coronary atherosclerosis. Ten previously reported cases of the condition are briefly reviewed.
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PMID:Telangiectatic fistula between the conal branch of the left coronary artery and the pulmonary trunk. 115 56

One thousand coronary arteriograms were reviewed to determine the incidence, clinical presentation and angiographic features of aneurysms of the coronary artery (ACA) in adults with angina. Criteria for the angiographic diagnosis are described and the angiographic aspects are emphasized. The incidence of ACA was 1.1%. Saccular and fusiform aneurysms were seen. Single aneurysms were present in 7 patients. One patient had an abdominal aneurysm. Five patients underwent surgery; two had postoperative selective coronary angiography one year later and all five underwent follow-up left ventricular angiography. The most likely etiology of the aneurysms in this series is atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Aneurysms of the coronary arteries in the adult. Clincial and angiographic features. 116 48

The morbidity and mortality in 172 males and 164 females with xanthomatosis have been investigated. Symptoms of coronary heart disease (CHD) were the most frequent initial manifestation of atherosclerotic vascular disease. Angina pectoris was the first symptom in about 3/4 of males as well as females; myocardial infarction was the first event in 26% of the males and 9% of the females. Other manifestations of atherosclerosis were comparatively rare and occurred late in life. Half of the subjects were affected with symptoms of atherosclerotic vascular disease by the age of 52 in men and 62 in women, the mean age for first symptoms being 49 and 56 years, respectively. No significant influence of other CHD risk factors than xanthomatosis and hyperlipidaemia was found in these patients. An increase in the number of cardiovascular deaths was seen in xanthomatosis patients, compared with the general population, in particular in the number of "sudden deaths". Half of the males died before the age of 66 and half of the females before the age of 74.5, which is about 10 and 7 years earlier than predicted at 30 years of age for the normal population. The cumulative relative mortality in both men and women was about twice that expected for the general Norwegian population until 70 years of age.
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PMID:The risk of atherosclerotic vascular disease in subjects with xanthomatosis. 118 82


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