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)

To clarify the central effects of physical training on patients with coronary heart disease, 81 subjects were selected for the present study. Evaluations of the oxygen transport system function were performed according to the definition proposed by Bruce and others in terms of FAI (functional aerobic impairment), LVI (left ventricular impairment) or MRI (myocardial reserve impairment), CRI (chronotropic reserve impairment) and PCI (peripheral circulatory impairment). Remarkable improvement in left ventricular impairment was found in those patients with single vessel disease or those who experienced disappearance of chest pain after the completion of the program. In another series of study on myocardial perfusion performed on 11 patients with coronary heart disease, improvement in ischemia was also demonstrated in 7 of 8 patients who revealed redistribution pattern in 201TL exercise stress images specifying myocardial ischemia. In conclusion, exercise training could induce improvements not only the left ventricular functions characterized by increased maximal pressure rate product and maximal heart rate, but also in myocardial ischemia. Further studies are needed to specify its effects, since natural progression or regression of the disease process itself may influence the results.
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PMID:Physical training of the patients with coronary heart disease: noninvasive strategies for the evaluation of its effects on the oxygentransport system and myocardial ischemia. 228 45

The purpose of the present study was to test the hypothesis that early detection of regional wall motion abnormalities (WMA) by 2D echocardiography (ECHO) accurately predicts further cardiac events in patients presenting with acute chest pain. A prospective analysis was performed in subjects admitted with the first presentation of acute chest pain and a non-diagnostic ECG for acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction. Patients with known coronary artery disease were excluded. All subjects were contacted by phone for a 30days follow-up regarding cardiac events defined as PCI/CABG, AMI, and death. In 132 consecutive patients (89 male, 43 female) complete data sets consisting of case history (H; abnormal: typical angina), ECG (abnormal: ST-depression, T-inversion, atypical ST-elevation, LBBB), serum markers (TnI; abnormal: elevation of troponin I=0.5 ng/ml), ECHO (abnormal: WMA) and follow-up were available. In 45 patients, 60 cardiac events occurred (three deaths, 24 AMI, 33 PCI/CABG). Positive (PPV; %) and negative predictive values (NPV; %) of ECHO were superior to all other diagnostic tests (P<0.05 each) for adverse cardiac events, evolving AMI or death, and superior to history and ECG for later need of revascularisation (PCI/ACVB). Multivariate analysis revealed that WMA in ECHO predict cardiac events independently of age, gender, and the common combination of investigations (H/ECG/TnI). A significant independent impact of ECHO was also determined for the prediction of AMI/death or PCI/CABG. The study shows that early 2D echocardiography provides superior prognostic information concerning the risk of subsequent complications in patients with acute chest pain and a non-diagnostic ECG for ST-elevation-AMI.
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PMID:Prognostic value of 2D echocardiography in patients presenting with acute chest pain and non-diagnostic ECG for ST-elevation myocardial infarction. 1212 75

We report the case of a 45 year old man presenting to our emergency ward with acute onset of typical chest pain. The ECG showed ST-segment depression in the postero-lateral leads without elevation of any cardiac enzymes. The coronary angiogram showed a three-vessel disease with a subtotal, short stenosis of the right coronary artery and a severe ostial stenosis of the left main coronary artery. An operative revascularization with a venous graft to the right coronary artery and a angioplasty with an autologous vein patch of the left main coronary artery were performed. No peri- or postoperative complications occurred. Because of the importance of the left main coronary artery, the patient underwent an early post-operative coronary angiogram with intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) to confirm the patency of the patch angioplasty. We discuss the historical development, the indications and the main advantages of the patch angioplasty in comparison to conventional CABG procedures. The main issue of the presentation is the special value of IVUS in the pre- and postoperative assessment of the left main coronary artery. Within the last few years, IVUS has emerged from a pure research tool to the gold standard of coronary imaging. It is playing a more and more important role in the assessment of angiographically unclear lesions, mainly in the left main stem and its bifurcation. In addition, IVUS has a large influence in clinical decision making, e.g., reverral to CABG or PCI. It is also a powerful tool for optimizing the operative setting and provides the best possible postoperative control.
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PMID:[Surgical angioplasty of the left main coronary artery. Evaluation and postoperative follow-up with intravascular ultrasound]. 1239 26

In patients with stable CAD, PCI can be considered a valuable initial mode of revascularization in all patients with objective large ischaemia in the presence of almost every lesion subset, with only one exception: chronic total occlusions that cannot be crossed. In early studies, there was a small survival advantage with CABG surgery compared with PCI without stenting. The addition of stents and newer adjunctive medications improved the outcome for PCI. The decision to recommend PCI or CABG surgery will be guided by technical improvements in cardiology or surgery, local expertise, and patients' preference. However, until proved otherwise, PCI should be used only with reservation in diabetics with multi-vessel disease and in patients with unprotected left main stenosis. The use of drug-eluting stents might change this situation. Patients presenting with NSTE-ACS (UA or NSTEMI) have to be stratified first for their risk of acute thrombotic complications. A clear benefit from early angiography (<48 h) and, when needed, PCI or CABG surgery has been reported only in the high-risk groups. Deferral of intervention does not improve outcome. Routine stenting is recommended on the basis of the predictability of the result and its immediate safety. In patients with STEMI, primary PCI should be the treatment of choice in patients presenting in a hospital with PCI facility and an experienced team. Patients with contra-indications to thrombolysis should be immediately transferred for primary PCI, because this might be their only chance for quickly opening the coronary artery. In cardiogenic shock, emergency PCI for complete revascularization may be life-saving and should be considered at an early stage. Compared with thrombolysis, randomized trials that transferred the patients for primary PCI to a 'heart attack centre' observed a better clinical outcome, despite transport times leading to a significantly longer delay between randomization and start of the treatment. The superiority of primary PCI over thrombolysis seems to be especially clinically relevant for the time interval between 3 and 12 h after onset of chest pain or other symptoms on the basis of its superior preservation of myocardium. Furthermore, with increasing time to presentation, major-adverse-cardiac-event rates increase after thrombolysis, but appear to remain relatively stable after primary PCI. Within the first 3 h after onset of chest pain or other symptoms, both reperfusion strategies seem equally effective in reducing infarct size and mortality. Therefore, thrombolysis is still a viable alternative to primary PCI, if it can be delivered within 3 h after onset of chest pain or other symptoms. Primary PCI compared with thrombolysis significantly reduced stroke. Overall, we prefer primary PCI over thrombolysis in the first 3 h of chest pain to prevent stroke, and in patients presenting 3-12 h after the onset of chest pain, to salvage myocardium and also to prevent stroke. At the moment, there is no evidence to recommend facilitated PCI. Rescue PCI is recommended, if thrombolysis failed within 45-60 min after starting the administration. After successful thrombolysis, the use of routine coronary angiography within 24 h and PCI, if applicable, is recommended even in asymptomatic patients without demonstrable ischaemia to improve patients' outcome. If a PCI centre is not available within 24 h, patients who have received successful thrombolysis with evidence of spontaneous or inducible ischaemia before discharge should be referred to coronary angiography and revascularized accordingly--independent of 'maximal' medical therapy.
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PMID:Guidelines for percutaneous coronary interventions. The Task Force for Percutaneous Coronary Interventions of the European Society of Cardiology. 1676 Feb 7

Prompted by a case where a patient (with no risk factors, and single vessel disease) developed angina pectoris after previous blunt chest trauma, we searched Medline for blunt chest trauma and myocardial ischaemia. We found 77 cases describing AMI after blunt chest trauma, but only one reporting angina pectoris. We focused on the age and sex distribution, type of trauma, the angiography findings and the time interval between the trauma and the angiography. The age distribution was atypical, compared to AMI in general; 82% of the patients with AMI after blunt chest trauma were less than 45 years old, and only 2.5% more than 60 years old. The most common trauma was a road traffic accident, and the LAD was the vessel most often affected. Angiography revealed 12 cases with completely normal vessels, which might be due to spasm or recanalisation; 31 cases showed occlusion but no atherosclerosis, which strongly suggested a causal relation between the trauma and subsequent occlusion. AMI should therefore be considered in patients suffering from chest pain after blunt chest trauma. Because traumatic AMI might often be the result of an intimal tear or dissection, thrombolytic therapy might worsen the situation and acute PCI must be considered preferable. It seems likely that lesser damage could lead to longer-term stenosis we suspect that this sequence is grossly under-reported. This could have medico-legal implications.
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PMID:Prior blunt chest trauma may be a cause of single vessel coronary disease; hypothesis and review. 1596 88

A 68-year-old female with history of anterior wall myocardial infarction (MI) 20 years earlier, underwent coronary angiography after having a non ST elevation MI. Before the procedure, the patient and her close family, including her husband and 2 sons were given thorough explanation of the procedure, its risks and benefits. A totally occluded mid LAD with collaterals from the RCA was found. Besides this presumably 20-year-old chronic total occlusion of the LAD, no other significant lesions were detected, hence medical therapy was recommended. Twelve hours after this diagnostic angiography, the same team was called urgently to perform primary PCI on a 41-year-old male, who presented to the emergency department within 4 h from onset of chest pain and signs of anterior wall ST elevation MI. The treating team immediately recognized the patient as the son of the lady who underwent angiography just several hours ago. This time the explanations about the procedure were concise. Angiography revealed an acute total occlusion of the mid LAD, which was successfully treated. The location of the blockage in mid LAD, just distal to the 1st diagonal and a large septal artery, was closely the same in the mother and in the son. Genetic predisposition and emotional stress are linked together in the present presentation. The proximity of time may be attributed to emotional stress while the proximity in location of the culprit lesions in these two cases may have genetic factors. To our knowledge, this is the first description of an acute MI in a sibling with a coronary artery occlusion in the exact anatomy as of the mother, occurring just several hours after the mother's coronary angiography.
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PMID:Like mother like son. 1627 24

We report three patients with the entire coronary origin arising from the right sinus of Valsalva. The first patient had a single right coronary ostium associated with a bi-leaflet aortic valve. The second patient was admitted with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) for primary PCI. The third patient had 3 isolated ostia, all originating from the right sinus of Valsalva. Coronary anomalies are associated with increased mortality, depending on the myocardium at risk. A left main originating from the right coronary sinus is supplying a greater extent of the myocardium and is associated both with an increased incidence of symptoms and of sudden cardiac death. The possibility of such an artery anomaly should always be considered in young individuals with a history of chest pain or syncope.
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PMID:Anomalies of the coronary arteries originating from the right sinus of Valsalva. (1) Single coronary artery originating from the right sinus associated with fusion of the left and the non coronary cusp and atrophy of the left coronary ostium (2)Three separate coronary arteries originating from the right sinus of Valsalva. 1710 19

Non-invasive imaging of coronary arteries by transthoracic echocardiography is an emerging diagnostic tool to study the left main (LM), left descending artery (LAD), circumflex (Cx) and right coronary artery (RCA). Impaired coronary circulation can be assessed by measuring coronary velocity flow reserve (CVFR) by transthoracic Doppler echocardiography. Coronary artery stenoses can be identified as localized colour aliasing and accelerated flow velocities. We report a case with an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) of a 46-year-old man. With non-invasive imaging of coronary arteries by transthoracic echocardiography (TTE), we identified a segment of the mid right coronary artery (RCA) suggestive of stenosis with localized colour aliasing and accelerated flow velocity. We found a high ratio between the stenotic peak velocity and the prestenotic peak velocity, and a pathologic coronary flow velocity reserve (CFVR) distal to the stenosis in the posterior interventricular descending branch (RDP). Subsequent coronary angiography demonstrated one vessel disease with a stenosis in segment 3 of RCA, which was successfully treated with percutaneos coronary intervention PCI. Two weeks following the PCI procedure he was readmitted to hospital with chest pain. A subacute stent thrombosis was questioned, and repeated echocardiography was preformed. The mid portion of RCA showed normal and laminar flow. The CVFR of RCA measured in the RDP showed normal vasodilatory response, confirming an open RCA without any flow limitation. A repeated coronary angiogram demonstrated only a mild in stent intimal hyperplasia. This case illustrates the value of transthoracic echocardiography as a tool both in the diagnosis and the follow-up of chest pain disorders and coronary flow problems. Transthoracic echocardiography allows both direct visualization of the various coronary segments and assessment of the CVFR.
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PMID:Direct visualization of a significant stenosis of the right coronary artery by transthoracic echocardiography. A case report. 1790 28

Chronic total occlusion (CTO) is defined as an occlusion of a coronary vessels (TIMI 0 flow) lasting longer than 3 months. Successful recanalisation of CTO improves left ventricular function and survival. Retrograde technique can be used in patients, who have well-developed collaterals, when the antegrade approach is ineffective or difficult to perform. A 68-year-old male was referred for coronary angiography because of exercise angina chest pain. Coronary angiogram showed a CTO of RCA with collaterals from LAD. Following the unsuccessful traditional antegrade approach in 2004, we attempted a retrograde approach. The PCI procedure was performed successfully and without complications.
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PMID:[Successful recanalisation of chronic total occlusion using retrograde approach]. 1949 53

A 67-year-old man was admitted to our institution with sudden and persistent chest pain for 3 days. Coronary angiography showed massive thrombotic occlusion of the right coronary artery. The patient received intracoronary thrombolysis with alteplase (recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator, rt-PA). On repeated angiography, there was marked resolution of intracoronary thrombus. After percutaneous coronary intervention with stent implantation, the final result was complete revascularization of the right coronary artery (TIMI grade 3 distal flow). This case demonstrates that intracoronary rt-PA can result in local thrombus reduction in patients undergoing PCI, especially with a large thrombus burden.
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PMID:Successful revascularization of coronary artery occluded by massive intracoronary thrombi with alteplase and percutaneous coronary intervention. 2046 85


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