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Query: UMLS:C0008031 (
chest pain
)
17,248
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To elucidate the functional and prognostic significance of right ventricular dysfunction after acute inferior wall myocardial infarction, 74 consecutive patients with inferior infarction were prospectively evaluated with gated equilibrium blood pool imaging at rest, submaximal exercise thallium-201 scintigraphy and coronary angiography before hospital discharge. In addition, symptom-limited stress thallium-201 scintigraphy was performed in 61 patients at 3 months, and all patients were followed up clinically for 23 +/- 15 months. Utilizing predetermined radionuclide angiographic criteria, 47 patients (Group I) had normal right ventricular function, 12 patients (Group II) had mild to moderate dysfunction and 15 patients (Group III) had severe right ventricular dysfunction. There were no significant differences among the groups with regard to age, history of prior myocardial infarction, peak creatine kinase values, maximal Killip functional class, number or type of in-hospital complications, left ventricular ejection fraction, prevalence of multivessel disease or the distribution and severity of disease affecting the infarct-related vessel. Exercise tolerance as assessed by treadmill time, blood pressure-heart rate product and peak work load in
METS
was comparable among the three groups, both before hospital discharge and at 3 month follow-up. No differences in indicators of exercise-induced ischemia were noted among the groups, including the prevalence of redistribution thallium-201 defects, ST segment depression or symptoms of
chest pain
. Finally, cardiac mortality, reinfarction rate and the incidence of medically refractory angina pectoris were similar in the three groups. Thus, right ventricular dysfunction after acute inferior wall myocardial infarction does not appear to limit exercise tolerance or identify a subgroup of patients at higher risk for recurrent cardiac events.
...
PMID:A prospective clinical, scintigraphic, angiographic and functional evaluation of patients after inferior myocardial infarction with and without right ventricular dysfunction. 404 48
The exercise capacity of 155 hospital-based patients (125 males and 30 females) who underwent treadmill testing and coronary angiography for investigation of
chest pain
was used to derive regression equations for exercise capacity (
METS
) against age. A regression equation [18 - 0.16 x (age)] for males and [11 - 0.84 x (age)] for females was obtained. Using these equations an exercise capacity nomogram was developed. From this nomogram the predicted exercise capacity was calculated for another set of 228 patients (209 males and 19 females) whose treadmill tests were negative. The results confirmed that the nomogram could be applied to determine the expected and actual exercise capacity of Indians within a mean difference of 0.08
METS
. This nomogram is being offered for clinical, therapeutic and preventive use for Indian patients.
...
PMID:Exercise capacity in untrained normal adults: a nomogram for Indians. 906 33
A 77-year-old woman was referred to our Department of Cardiology because of exacerbation of
chest pain
and decreased exercise intolerance. No acute ischemic electrocardiography changes were seen in an electrocardiogram recorded on admission. An exercise test was terminated at 7
METS
because of shortness of breath without evidence of ischemia. The patient was referred for a coronary angiography which showed a coronary artery fistula filling from the left anterior descending (LAD) artery and resulting in a large inflow to the main pulmonary artery, without other significant coronary lesions. Transthoracic echocardiography showed a coronary artery fistula draining to the main pulmonary artery. Coronary steal was suspected and coronary flow reserve was evaluated in LAD, showing normal values for age. Due to the overall clinical picture, with the predominance of heart failure symptoms and the lack of significant abnormalities of flow reserve in LAD, medical therapy was selected. The patient remained free from cardiovascular symptoms at 6-month follow-up.
...
PMID:A coronary fistula diagnosed in the eighth decade of life: The utility of non-invasive methods in the selection of treatment approach. 2053 22
Coronary subclavian steal syndrome is a rare complication of coronary artery bypass grafting surgery (CABG) when a left internal mammary artery (LIMA) graft is utilized. This syndrome is characterized by retrograde flow from the LIMA to the left subclavian artery (SA) when a proximal left SA stenosis is present. We describe a unique case of an elderly male who underwent CABG 6 years ago who presented with prolonged
chest pain
, mildly elevated troponins, and unequal pulses in his arms. A CTA of the chest demonstrated a severely calcified occluded proximal left SA jeopardizing his LIMA graft. Subclavian angiography was performed with an attempt to revascularize the patient's occluded left SA which was unsuccessful. We referred the patient for nuclear stress testing which demonstrated a moderate size area of anterior ischemia on imaging; the patient exercised to a fair exercise capacity of 7
METS
with no
chest pain
and no ECG changes. Subsequent coronary angiography showed severe native three-vessel coronary artery disease with intermittent retrograde blood flow from the LIMA to the left SA distal to the occlusion, jeopardizing perfusion to the left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery distribution. He declined further options for revascularization and was discharged with medical management.
...
PMID:Coronary Subclavian Steal Syndrome: An Unusual Cause of Angina in a Post-CABG Patient. 2487 96