Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0008031 (chest pain)
17,248 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intravenous dipyridamole planar thallium-201 imaging is a safe and effective test for detection and prognosis of coronary artery disease (CAD) in the general population. The relative diagnostic accuracy and side-effect profile of dipyridamole thallium-201 stress imaging in women is not defined. Forty-three consecutive female and 71 male patients who underwent dipyridamole thallium-201 imaging (0.56 mg/kg) within 3 months of cardiac catheterization were studied. Scans were considered abnormal if fixed or reversible perfusion defects were detected. Stenosis severity of greater than or equal to 50% luminal diameter reduction of any artery defined CAD. Overall sensitivity for detection of CAD was 0.87 in women and 0.94 in men; specificity was 0.58 in women and 0.63 in men (p = not significant). Sensitivity for detection of 1-vessel CAD was 0.60 in women and 0.94 in men (p = 0.001). The sensitivity for detection of multivessel CAD (with or without surgical revascularization) was 1.0 and 0.94 in women and men, respectively. Adverse effects were reported in 62% of women and in 38% of men (p = 0.01). There was no significant difference in the incidences of chest pain, headache, nausea, flushing or electrocardiographic changes. The incidences of severe ischemia and dizziness were higher in women. Possible explanations for this difference in adverse effects include gender differences in the volume of distribution of dipyridamole due to varied fat-to-muscle ratios and different subjective nocioceptive sensitivities to the effects of dipyridamole. Overall sensitivity and specificity are comparable between the sexes.
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PMID:Comparison of accuracy for detecting coronary artery disease and side-effect profile of dipyridamole thallium-201 myocardial perfusion imaging in women versus men. 162 2

A 30-year-old woman developed ischemia-like chest pain due to myocardial compression by an intracardiac cyst. The cyst was located in the interventricular septum. Its etiology could not be ascertained despite several diagnostic measures but exstirpation was indicated by the clinical symptoms. Intraoperatively the diagnosis of echinococcosis was established. The cyst was extirpated in toto without perforation of the thinned interventricular septum. Postoperatively the patient was symptomfree.
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PMID:Echinococcal cyst of the interventricular septum: a rare cause of myocardial ischemia. 163 65

Directional coronary atherectomy (DCA) was used in 10 female and 50 male patients with an average age of 58 years. They were categorized into three different groups depending on the indications for atherectomy. Group 1 included all patients who had atherectomy as their primary intervention (n = 20) because they were assumed to be unsuitable for percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). Group 2 consisted of patients in whom DCA was used after failed balloon dilatation with unsuccessful but uneventful treatment (n = 17). Group 3 (n = 23) included patients in whom DCA was performed as a "rescue" or "bailout" procedure after unsuccessful PTCA resulting in critical ischemia (ECG changes, chest pain, hypotension, and shock). The target lesions were located in the left main artery in two, left anterior descending artery in 43, right coronary artery in 15, and aortocoronary venous bypass in five. The mean length of the lesions was 8 mm (2 to 25 mm). The overall success rate for 65 lesions was 92%. The mean stenosis was reduced from 87 +/- 12% to 19 +/- 17% in patients with primary success. Presently available follow-up angiograms (30) showed six restenoses. Major complications occurred in seven patients (myocardial infarction in two and coronary artery bypass graft surgery within 24 hours in five); there were no deaths. Our results show that DCA is a safe and effective technique that can extend the use of percutaneous procedures and provide a promising nonsurgical option in cases of unsuccessful PTCA.
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PMID:Efficacy of directional coronary atherectomy in cases unsuitable for percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) and after unsuccessful PTCA. 163 78

To explore the effect of beta-adrenergic blockade on low heart rate-related (mental stress) ischemia, 19 patients with coronary artery disease were randomized into a double-blind crossover trial of metoprolol, 100 mg twice daily, and underwent serial mental stress/bicycle exercise studies. Mental stress-induced wall motion abnormalities occurred at a lower heart rate than exercise-induced wall motion abnormalities during placebo administration (81 +/- 16 vs. 123 +/- 20 beats/min, p less than 0.05). Metoprolol reduced the mean magnitude of exercise-induced wall motion abnormalities (2.8 +/- 2.0 vs. 1.6 +/- 2.4, p = 0.003); improvement was related to the magnitude of hemodynamic beta-blockade effect. Metoprolol did not significantly reduce the mean magnitude of mental stress-induced wall motion abnormalities (3.0 +/- 2.2 vs. 2.6 +/- 2.2), although individual responses predominantly either improved (50%) or worsened (29%). Unlike exercise, the magnitude of hemodynamic beta-blockade did not predict mental stress response and metoprolol did not block mental stress-induced blood pressure elevations. Patients with abolition of exercise-induced ischemia were more likely to have reduction of mental stress-induced ischemia. Patients whose ischemia worsened with metoprolol during mental stress had more easily inducible ischemia, as assessed by exercise-induced placebo wall motion abnormality, chest pain and prior myocardial infarction. Beta-blockade was associated with a lowering of ischemia-related hemodynamic thresholds compared with placebo. These results suggest that beta-blockade has a variable effect on low heart rate-related ischemia that may be due to a lack of effect on mental stress-induced blood pressure elevation in patients with easily induced ischemia or to effects on coronary vasomotor tone, or both.
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PMID:Effect of beta-blockade on low heart rate-related ischemia during mental stress. 167 34

Although the efficacy of long-term administration of antithrombotic agents in unstable angina has been established, short-term effects on myocardial ischemia are unknown. A retrospective analysis was performed in 47 patients undergoing three-channel continuous ST segment monitoring as part of a multicenter trial using esmolol in unstable angina, in which 20 patients received a continuous heparin infusion during the initial assessment of chest pain. Concomitant medications included calcium channel blockers, beta-adrenergic blockers, nitrates, and aspirin in the majority of patients. Clinical variables between the heparin and no heparin groups were similar, except for fewer males and fewer total artery occlusions in the heparin group. No significant differences in the incidence or duration of ischemia were found in a 36 +/- 16 hour monitoring period. Forty percent of the heparin group had 35 episodes of ischemia with a mean of 11 +/- 10 minutes per episode and a total ischemic time of 48 +/- 39 minutes per patient with ischemia. Forty-four percent of the no heparin group had 47 episodes of ischemia with a mean of 13 +/- 13 minutes per episode and a total ischemic time of 58 +/- 47 minutes per patient with ischemia. Multiple linear regression analysis to adjust for intergroup differences did not alter the results. Eighty-five percent of all episodes were asymptomatic. Clinical events, such as episodes of chest pain, emergency coronary arteriography, or coronary revascularization, were also similar between groups. Thus the short-term administration of heparin did not alter the incidence or duration of ischemia in patients with unstable angina.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Failure of adjuvant heparin to reduce myocardial ischemia in the early treatment of patients with unstable angina. 168 22

The association between ventricular ectopic activity (VEA) and ischemic episodes during everyday activities was investigated in ambulatory patients with stable angina pectoris. Seventy-five consecutive patients with proven coronary artery disease, ischemic episodes on Holter monitoring and positive treadmill tests, but without known ventricular arrhythmias, were prospectively studied. In these 75 patients, a total of 719 ischemic episodes were recorded during 127 twenty-four-hour monitoring periods. Forty-three patients had either no or only very low baseline VEA (less than 14 ventricular premature complexes [VPCs]/24 hours); none of these patients had increased VEA during any ischemic episode. However, among 32 patients who had greater than or equal to 14 VPCs/24 hours (average 243 VPCs/24 hours), increased VEA during ischemic episodes was observed in 11 (31%). These 11 patients had a total of 174 ischemic episodes and the increased VEA appeared in 47 (27%) of the episodes. During 40 of the ischemic episodes the number of single VPCs increased significantly compared to the baseline background VEA: during 4 episodes trigeminy appeared and during another 3 bigeminy was observed. More complex VEA was not observed. Among the 11 patients with increased VEA, only 4 developed VPCs during treadmill testing. No correlation was found between the severity of the ischemic episodes (degree of ST depression and duration of ischemia) and the increased VEA. In 83% of these episodes the increased VEA appeared during the last (possibly reperfusion) phase. No correlation was found between the appearance of ventricular arrhythmias during ischemic episodes and the presence or absence of chest pain at the same time.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Ventricular ectopic activity during myocardial ischemic episodes in ambulatory patients. 224 81

Although beta-sympathomimetic tocolytic therapy has been associated with transient subendocardial ischemia, magnesium sulfate has rarely been noted to cause acute chest pain and is, in fact, known to improve myocardial perfusion in patients with variant angina. We believe this report represents the first case in which intravenous magnesium sulfate administered as a tocolytic agent caused acute chest pain accompanied by transient electrocardiographic evidence of subendocardial ischemia.
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PMID:Transient symptomatic subendocardial ischemia during intravenous magnesium sulfate tocolytic therapy. 173 14

Intracoronary (i.c.) thrombus is a frequent finding in patients with unstable angina (UA). Accordingly, thrombolytic treatment could be beneficial, as resolution of thrombus might result in increased delivery of blood flow to the ischemic regions. To test this hypothesis, we studied 13 patients with active UA and ST-segment shift in the anterior leads. Coronary angiography was performed and great cardiac vein blood flow (GCVF; thermodilution) was measured in all patients 25 +/- 14 h after the last chest pain episode. Following angiography, patients received i.v. urokinase (UK: 1,000,000 IU/30 min); aortic pressure and GCVF were measured before and every 10 min following drug infusion, for a total time of 90 min. At baseline angiography, 5 of 13 patients (Group 1) had evidence of i.c. thrombus (intraluminal filling defect or thrombotic subocclusion) in the ischemia-related left coronary artery, whereas 8 patients (Group 2) did not. Group analysis showed that UK increased GCVF and decreased anterior coronary resistance in Group 1 (respectively, from 86 +/- 33 to 114 +/- 41 ml/min: p less than 0.005; and from 1.37 +/- 0.68 to 1.01 +/- 0.44 mmHg/ml/min: p less than 0.05) but not in Group 2 (both: p = NS). In conclusion, UK has been shown to increase regional coronary blood flow in selected patients presenting with active UA, as well as evidence of i.c. thrombus at early angiography. Heterogeneity of angiographic findings could explain controversies in trials dealing with thrombolysis in UA.
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PMID:Coronary hemodynamic effects of systemic thrombolysis in patients with unstable angina. 173 10

The use of a single-day protocol for 99mTc MIBI myocardial scintigraphy is particularly well-suited for the nuclear medicine departments that are the referral centres for the cardiology departments of several community hospitals. The aim of the study was to compare, in the same patient population, the diagnostic accuracy of planar and SPECT imaging with 99mTc MIBI using a single-day protocol. Thirty-nine patients (31 males and 8 females, age range 32-69 years) were studied because of effort chest pain. Of them, 7 had a pre-test probability of coronary artery disease less than 2.5%; coronary angiography demonstrated significant coronary obstructions in the remaining 32 subjects and 21 of them also had a history of previous myocardial infarction. All patients underwent 99mTc MIBI myocardial scintigraphy with acquisition of planar and SPECT images after injection of a low dose (370 MBq) at rest and after a second higher dose (1110 MBq), injected approximately four hours later during exercise stress testing. The normalcy rate in the 7 patients with low pre-test probability was 100% using both imaging techniques. For the diagnosis of previous infarction, the sensitivities of planar and SPECT images were 71% and 96% respectively. For the diagnosis of effort ischemia the sensitivity values were 34% and 88%, respectively, using planar and SPECT imaging. With regard to the classification of the diseased coronary arteries, the sensitivities of planar and SPECT studies were 42% and 79% respectively, and the related specificities were 91% and 77%. We may conclude that using a single-day protocol planar imaging seems to allow lower levels of diagnostic accuracy both for the diagnosis of effort ischemia and the classification of the diseased vessels as compared to SPECT, which appears therefore in a similar setting the imaging technique of choice.
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PMID:[Myocardial scintigraphy with 99mTc MIBI. The use of a single-day protocol in a multiregional center: a comparison between planar and tomographic imaging]. 174 42

This study develops a "time-insensitive" predictive instrument for acute myocardial infarction mortality that would be useful both as a real-time clinical decision aid in the emergency medical setting and also for retrospective assessment and comparison of medical care based on risk-adjusted mortality predictions. This was done using prospectively-collected data on 5,773 patients with chief complaints of chest pain or other symptoms suggesting acute cardiac ischemia who came to six New England hospitals over a 2-year period. In phase one, based upon 4,099 patients, multivariate logistic regression was used to develop the predictive instrument. In phase two, its accuracy and diagnostic performance were tested on an independent sample of 1,387 patients presenting with symptoms compatible with acute cardiac ischemia. Discrimination between patients who lived and those who died was reflected by receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve areas of 0.85, 0.80, and 0.76, respectively, for all emergency department study subjects regardless of final diagnosis, subjects who proved to be having acute cardiac ischemia, and subjects who proved to be having acute infarction. Good calibration was shown by the fact that the predicted mortality was found to not vary significantly from actual mortality rates across deciles of predicted probabilities from 0% to 100%. In phase three, based on all 945 study subjects with acute myocardial infarction, each of the six hospitals' actual mortality rates were compared to their rates predicted by the predictive instrument. Actual hospital mortality rates ranged from 9.9% to 19.3%, with one hospital having a significantly higher rate (P = 0.005) and two hospitals both). Predicted mortality rates ranged from 13.4% to 19.4%, with one hospital having a significantly higher predicted rate (P = 0.005) and two hospitals having significantly lower predicted rates (P = 0.04 and P = 0.03). Individual hospitals' differences between actual and predicted mortality ranged from -3.4% to +3.1% (all NS). When grouped by hospital type, the actual mortality rates were 14.9%, 17.3%, and 13.0%, respectively, for urban teaching, smaller city teaching, and rural nonteaching hospitals (all NS). The predicted mortality rates were 16.5%, 17.1%, and 13.6%, respectively, with the rate for rural nonteaching hospitals being significantly lower (P = 0.009). No hospital type had significant differences between their actual and predicted mortality rates (NS). The time-insensitive predictive instrument for acute infarction mortality shows potential for risk-adjusted studies of hospitals mortality for multihospital groups, hospital-to-hospital comparisons, and within-hospital assessment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:A time-insensitive predictive instrument for acute myocardial infarction mortality: a multicenter study. 174 78


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