Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (atherosclerosis)
77,401 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Left subclavian stenosis is an uncommon cause of exertional left arm pain. In a patient who presented with exertional chest and left arm pain in an increasing pattern, clinical evaluation disclosed a discrepancy between right and left arm blood pressure. Exercise stress testing with thallium revealed normal myocardial perfusion. Aortic arch and selective angiography revealed a high-grade proximal left subclavian stenosis. Subclavian angioplasty was performed with complete resolution of symptoms. This case demonstrates that ischemic left arm pain due to subclavian stenosis can present as accelerated angina, and highlights the importance of determining blood pressure in both arms in routine evaluation of patients at risk for atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Subclavian stenosis presenting as progressive exertional angina pectoris. 213 44

We report the case of a 32-year-old man who presented at the emergency department with severe chest pressure, left arm pain, and dizziness. These symptoms were described as intermittent, occurring after exercise and at rest. He had undergone several stress tests during the past 8 years, but no objective evidence of ischemia was produced. His history of hyperlipidemia and increasing frequency of symptoms prompted us to perform coronary angiography, which showed a single coronary artery with an ostium at the right sinus of Valsalva. The vessel had an initial, mixed common trunk that gave rise to both the right coronary artery proper and to the left coronary artery. The left main trunk followed a prepulmonic course. The anatomic features were eventually confirmed by computed tomographic angiography. The left main stem had a fixed 50% to 60% area narrowing, at baseline study. A treadmill stress myocardial perfusion study showed no evidence of ischemia. The patient was referred to a 2nd facility, where intravascular ultrasonography, at baseline, revealed 63% left main narrowing without evidence of atherosclerosis. Acetylcholine provocation demonstrated worsening of the stenosis to about 80%, with reproduction of angina and ST-segment depression, which indicated that medical management of spasm might provide symptomatic relief.
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PMID:Single coronary artery with prepulmonic coursing left main coronary artery manifesting as prinzmetal's angina. 1817 28