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Query: UMLS:C0008031 (
chest pain
)
17,248
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In reflux disease the authors emphasize the following diagnostic procedures: a satisfactory case-history, endoscopy, aimed biopsy, radiographic evidence of reflux, radionuclide reflux scintigraphy and pH-metry. As to subsidiary examinations, they recommend Bernstein's perfusion test. In 50% of the patients with non-coronary
chest pain
the complaints are caused by diseases of the oesophagus. The latter include achalasia, dysphagia, idiopathic diffuse spasm, hyperdynamic oesophagus and irritable oesophagus. In the treatment of reflux disease the stage of the disease is decisive. Treatment is prolonged and the doses of drugs are higher than in duodenal ulcers. The basis are H2 blockers. In severe forms treatment with omeprazole is indicated. Surgery is indicated only in severe mucosal complications. In achalasia of the oesophagus this is disruption of the sphincter by the method of pneumatic dilatation or surgical myotomy. Idiopathic diffuse spasm and other disorders of oesophageal motility respond in different ways to treatment with calcium autagonists and
nitrate
treatment.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and therapy of esophageal diseases]. 850 59
Nitroglycerin and the long-acting nitrates are effective antianginal agents that have been used in clinical medicine for over 100 years. These drugs are reliable, safe, familiar to clinicians, inexpensive, and easy to use. Side effects are limited to headache and postural hypotensive symptoms.
Nitrate
tolerance or attenuation, -ie, loss of, or decrease in,
nitrate
efficacy with repeated dosing-is common and represents the major drawback to chronic therapy. Carefully designed dosing regimens and/or appropriate use of
nitrate
formulations (to include a
nitrate
-free period each day) will decrease or eliminate the problem of
nitrate
tolerance. In head-on comparative studies, nitrates appear to be as effective as beta-blockers or calcium channel blockers in the monotherapy of chronic angina. Ideal patient characteristics for
nitrate
therapy include: predictably favourable response of
chest pain
to sublingual nitroglycerin; angina episodes suggestive of coronary vaso-constriction or spasm; left ventricular systolic dysfunction; symptoms of congestive heart failure (systolic or diastolic dysfunction).
...
PMID:Therapy of angina pectoris with long-acting nitrates: which agent and when? 863 22
The predominant venodilator properties of the nitrates and their augmentation of collateral coronary blood flow to the ischemic myocardium endows them with some ideal characteristics for treating myocardial ischemic syndromes. Additional efficacy stems from the ability of the nitrates to replenish the deficient endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), nitric oxide (NO), in patients with coronary heart disease and also to inhibit platelet aggregation. In stable angina pectoris, the antianginal and antiischemic effects of oral nitrates are well established. Continuous administration of nitrates may lead to tolerance of their clinical efficacy. Recent studies, however, have demonstrated that when used in recommended doses, tolerance can be avoided during long-term treatment with oral nitrates without provocation of anginal attacks during periods of low
nitrate
levels at night and early hours of the morning. Thus, prolonged treatment with an asymmetric twice-daily regimen of immediate-release isosorbide-5-mononitrate in patients with stable angina pectoris does not give rise to clinical tolerance, prolongs exercise duration, and delays the onset of myocardial ischemia. In unstable angina pectoris, nitrates rapidly relieve
chest pain
and ameliorate the electrocardiographic signs of myocardial ischemia. In patients with acute myocardial infarction, early treatment with nitrates prevents left ventricular dilatation, improves pumping function, and reduces the risk of ventricular arrhythmias. In patients with chronic heart failure, oral nitrates improve exercise tolerance and, when given in combination with the systemic arterial dilator hydralazine, extend survival. Meta-analysis of published studies has demonstrated that both intravenous and oral nitrates reduced infarct size and morbidity and mortality in patients with acute myocardial infarction. In the ISIS 4 post-infarction study, isosorbide-5-mononitrate 60 mg once daily was not superior to placebo in reducing mortality risk. However, in the GISSI 3 study, the combination of nitrates with an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor reduced mortality risks by 17% in patients with acute myocardial infarction. In both the ISIS 4 and GISSI 3 studies, 62% and 57% of the patients in the placebo and control groups, respectively, were treated with nitrates for control of rest angina, myocardial ischemia, and or left ventricular failure symptoms, and this widespread use of open-label nitrates in the control groups may have diluted the true beneficial effects of nitrates in both studies. Taken together, these many studies with oral
nitrate
treatment in coronary heart disease and heart failure clearly emphasize that these drugs are safe and play more than a symptomatic role in the management of patients with acute and chronic ischemic syndromes due to coronary artery disease.
...
PMID:Oral nitrates: more than symptomatic therapy in coronary artery disease? 921 Oct 13
We investigated the clinical features and management of 50 patients presenting with acute myocardial infarction from the community and 50 patients presenting with cardiac symptoms who developed an infarct after being admitted to a general medical ward for observation. Nineteen of the 50 patients initially admitted to non-specialist wards were found retrospectively to have sustained an infarct prior to hospital admission. Of the remaining 31 admission in this group, 24 developed symptoms within 24 hours of admission, 26 presented with
chest pain
, while 21 had evidence of acute coronary ischaemia on the admission electrocardiograph. Of the 26 patients who presented with
chest pain
, 20 were treated with aspirin, 13 with intravenous
nitrate
and four with heparin. Median delay from onset of symptoms to thrombolysis with in-hospital patients was 120 minutes and for community patients 287 minutes. Interestingly, the greatest component of this delay in both groups was the time taken for patients to decide to seek assistance after developing acute symptoms. Patients at high risk of developing acute myocardial infarction within 24 hours of hospital admission may be identified by a history of
chest pain
and electrocardiographic evidence of acute coronary ischaemia at admission. Such patients may experience suboptimal treatment and delays to thrombolysis if admitted to nonspecialist wards, but this may be reduced by admitting all 'high risk' patients directly to a high dependency cardiac ward for the first 24 hours after presentation.
...
PMID:Minimising delays to thrombolysis in patients developing acute myocardial infarction in hospital. 953
Nitrates are commonly used for rapid relief of ischemia in the initial management of unstable angina. However, their optimal dosage, route of administration, and therapeutic goals have not been fully established. This study was conducted to determine the optimal dosage and mode of administration (intravenous bolus versus sublingual spray) of nitrates and the therapeutic goals of their use in the immediate management of unstable angina. In a single-center prospective trial, 72 consecutive patients with unstable angina accompanied by typical ST-segment depression on electrocardiogram were randomly assigned to receive isosorbide dinitrate either as repeated intravenous boluses or as sublingual sprays while being delivered to the hospital by a mobile intensive care unit. Optimal
nitrate
dosage was tailored to pain relief while monitoring mean blood pressure reduction to an optimal range (5% to 20%) without dosage restriction. The mean
nitrate
dosage needed for ischemia control during the first hour of treatment was 7.8 +/- 3.8 mg. Optimal blood pressure reduction was achieved by significantly more intravenously treated patients than sublingually treated patients (68% v 41%, P = .037). Intravenously treated patients also experienced a more pronounced therapeutic effect, as assessed by reduction in
chest pain
score (67% v 39%, P = .0004) and decrease in ST-segment depressions (57% v 27%, P = .004). These results show that higher doses of nitrates than previously recommended are required for ischemia control during the initial management of unstable angina. The use of repeated intravenous boluses is safe and more easily controlled and, therefore, more efficacious than sublingual sprays in inducing the maximal anti-ischemic effect while avoiding significant hypotension.
...
PMID:High-dose nitrates in the immediate management of unstable angina: optimal dosage, route of administration, and therapeutic goals. 959 18
We used a psychological treatment package (education, relaxation, breathing training, graded exposure to activity and exercise, and challenging automatic thoughts about heart disease) to treat 60 patients who had continuing
chest pain
despite cardiological reassurance following haemodynamically normal angiography. The treatment was delivered in six sessions over eight weeks to groups of up to six patients. The patients kept daily records of
chest pain
episode frequency and
nitrate
use. Questionnaires were used to assess anxiety, depression and disability. Exercise tolerance was tested by treadmill electrocardiography, with capnographic assessment of hyperventilation. The results were compared with waiting-list controls. Treatment significantly reduced
chest pain
episodes (p < 0.01) from median 6.5 to 2.5 per week. There were significant improvements in anxiety and depression scores (p < 0.05), disability rating (p < 0.0001) and exercise tolerance (p < 0.05), and these were maintained at six month follow-up. Treatment reduced the prevalence of hyperventilation from 54% to 34% (p < 0.01) but not the prevalence of ECG-positive exercise tests. Patients continuing to attribute their pain to heart disease had poorer outcomes. Group psychological treatment for non-cardiac
chest pain
is feasible, reduces pain, psychological morbidity and disability, and improves exercise tolerance.
...
PMID:Group psychological treatment for chest pain with normal coronary arteries. 1020 59
The effects of a beta blocker (atenolol), a calcium antagonist (amlodipine), and a
nitrate
(isosorbide-5-mononitrate) on anginal symptoms in 10 patients with syndrome X were assessed in a crossover, double-blind, randomized trial. Only atenolol was found to significantly improve
chest pain
episodes, suggesting that it should be the preferred drug when starting pharmacologic treatment of patients with syndrome X.
...
PMID:Atenolol versus amlodipine versus isosorbide-5-mononitrate on anginal symptoms in syndrome X. 1051 87
To examine whether or not the levels of NOx (nitrite; NO2- and
nitrate
;
NO3
-) in coronary circulating blood reflect endothelial dysfunction due to coronary atherosclerosis, NOx levels in plasma obtained from ostium of left coronary artery and coronary sinus of patients who complained of
chest pain
were evaluated in relation to their coronary angiographic findings. Prior to the study, a HPLC-Griess system for NOx measurement was critically evaluated. This system has a detection limit of 0.1 microM of NO2- and
NO3
- by 10 microl of loading and was able to distinguish a difference of 0.1-0.2 microM of these substances. Heparin (1 U/10 microl) did not affect the detective and discriminative abilities.
NO3
- difference, calculated from sino-arterial difference of
NO3
-, was almost zero (-0.2 +/- 0.2 microM) in patients with either normal coronary arteries or mild organic coronary stenosis (< or = 20% narrowing), while a significant negative value (-5.9 +/- 1.7 microM) was obtained from patients with significant stenosis (> or = 70% narrowing) in the left coronary arteries. These results demonstrate reliable ability on the HPLC-Griess system in evaluating NO2- and
NO3
- in biological samples, and that the negative
NO3
- difference through coronary circulation may reflect endothelial dysfunction in the patients with coronary atherosclerosis with severe organic stenosis.
...
PMID:Negative NO3- difference in human coronary circulation with severe atherosclerotic stenosis. 1066 13
Cardiac and musculoskeletal disease should be excluded before considering an esophageal etiology for
chest pain
. Acid reflux is a common cause of
chest pain
and should be identified and treated. A therapeutic trial should consist of a proton pump inhibitor (omeprazole 20 mg or lanzoprazole 30 mg) given one or two times per day for at least 6 to 8 weeks. An alternative is to use an ambulatory pH study to confirm reflux. Also, if the patient fails the initial treatment, reflux should be confirmed with pH testing before increasing the dose of proton pump inhibitor or considering combination or surgical therapy. Esophageal manometry should be considered in patients with
chest pain
and dysphagia. It is also reasonable to perform manometry before a pH study since manometric localization of the lower esophageal sphincter (LES) is needed to ensure accurate pH probe placement. Only after manometric confirmation of a spastic esophageal motility disorder should patients be treated for esophageal spasm. In these patients, it is reasonable to try a long-acting formulation of a calcium-channel blocker or
nitrate
. Patients with
chest pain
who have a negative cardiac evaluation and who do not have reflux may have an abnormality in esophageal or cardiac sensation. These patients should be treated with a trial of an antidepressant and considered for referral to a mental health practitioner. All medication trials should continue at least 6 to 8 weeks to avoid a placebo effect and to allow adequate time for a therapeutic response.
...
PMID:Noncardiac Chest Pain of Esophageal Origin. 1109 64
Although the long-term survival of patients suffering from coronary spasm is usually excellent, serious complications can develop, such as disabling pain, myocardial infarction, ventricular tachyarrhythmias, atrioventricular block and sudden cardiac death. A 40-year-old man who had intractable
chest pain
from coronary artery spasm suffered ventricular fibrillation and an acute anterior myocardial infarction upon first admission. The patient underwent a coronary angiogram, which revealed a spontaneous focal spasm at the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD). He was treated by the combination of
nitrate
and calcium channel blocker, but continued to complain of severe
chest pain
despite intensive medical therapy and he had to be treated in the emergency room 5 times during an 8-month follow-up period. An ergonovine coronary angiogram was performed and an intracoronary ultrasound examination, which revealed a focal spasm at the same site of the proximal LAD with a small amount of localized eccentric atheromatous plaque. A coronary artery stent was placed in the proximal LAD and his symptoms resolved. A follow-up coronary angiogram was performed 3 years after stenting and the stent remained patent without any in-stent restenosis or spasm.
...
PMID:Successful management of intractable coronary spasm with a coronary stent. 1111 Apr 39
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