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)

Syndrome "X" comprises a heterogeneous group of patients with normal coronarographic findings whose repeatedly occurring chest pain is of ischaemic origin, similarly as angina pectoris in patients with CHD. One of the signs of ischaemic etiology of pain in these patients is significant depression of the ST interval on the ECG during ergometry. We were interested to know whether the depression of the ST interval and angina pectoris which develop during a load are associated also with a transient disorder of left ventricular local kinetics. We examined therefore five patients, using the dipyridamol test combined with an isometric load evaluated by two-dimensional (2D) echocardiography. All examinations revealed a normal coronarographic finding and significant electrocardiographic manifestations of ischaemia during ECG stress test. The investigation showed that none of the patients with "X" syndrome suffered from transient changes in the local kinetics of the heart muscle and we assume therefore that myocardial ischaemia in syndrome "X" does not affect a sufficiently large portion of the cardiac wall in the transmural section to be manifested by impaired kinetics detectable by 2D-echocardiography.
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PMID:[The dipyridamole echocardiography test combined with isometric loading in the diagnosis of syndrome "X"]. 179 45

Myocardial scintigraphy with 99mTc-pyrophosphate is a widely used highly sensitive and specific method for the evaluation of patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) with optimum visualization within 24-72 h after the onset of chest pain. In some cases the so called doughnut-shaped 99mTc-pyrophosphate myocardial scintigrams may occur. As a rule patients with scintigraphic images of this type have a poor prognosis. Old-aged patients are characterized by peculiar features in the interpretation of 99mTc-pyrophosphate myocardial uptake. Findings of 4 patients aged 88 to 92 (2 patients with verified AMI and 2 CHD patients without AMI) with doughnut-shaped 99mTc-pyrophosphate myocardial scintigraphic images were analyzed. The authors present two case reports of aged patients with AMI and without it with this type of myocardial uptake and one case report of a 50-year old patient with vast anterior myocardial infarction with a poor prognosis and doughnut-shaped 99mTc-pyrophosphate myocardial scintigraphy. In old-aged patients the uptake of 99mTc-pyrophosphate in the myocardium may occur not only with but also without AMI as a result of increased calcification. These features should be taken into account while establishing correct diagnosis.
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PMID:[Characteristics of 99m Tc-pyrophosphate images in the myocardium of aged patients]. 185 23

Important features of the racial patterns in CHD at the present time are summarized in Table 15-10. Many of these conclusions follow inevitably from the economic disadvantage suffered by blacks, and the overwhelming importance of hypertension in this population. More knowledge is needed regarding the value of standard diagnostic tools in distinguishing noncoronary from coronary chest pain symptoms. A hard look is also needed at questions of access for blacks, particularly to angioplasty and thrombolytic therapy. There is additional growing evidence that the gains against CHD have been concentrated primarily among the educated and affluent. New strategies will need to be developed if we are to repeat the kind of gains against cardiovascular disease among blacks in the 1990s that were made in the 1970s and 1980s.
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PMID:Coronary heart disease: black-white differences. 204 5

Although the study of coronary heart disease has provided a fruitful area of research for the psychosocial risk factors for disease, the amount of information among women is limited. Many of the psychological concepts tested in women have been developed from studies of men. The assumption that these psychological constructs (such as type A behavior) are pertinent to the psychology of women must be questioned. When women are included in studies of any disease, the questions asked of them must be applicable to their environment, behaviors, and psychological milieu. Because of the limited amount of data on women, it is difficult to draw conclusions regarding the relationships of psychosocial variables and the development of CHD. Several studies have indicated, however, that the change from a positive to an inverse relationship of SES to CHD in men has not been observed in women. Across various time periods and in different populations low SES is related to the occurrence of CHD in women. The reason for this is not known, and this is clearly an area for future investigations. Several measures of low social support have been found to be related to increase risk of CHD mortality and morbidity in women. A problem with this research is that each study demonstrated a different measure of social support to be the detrimental factor. This may be due to true differences between populations or may be a result of bias introduced from studying different age groups and different populations. It seems to be fairly clear that type A behavior, as measured in Framingham, is not related to definite CHD in women. The fact, however, that type A is related to anginal pain should not be minimized. These men and women are suffering from chest pain and are at increased risk to develop subsequent acute coronary events. For the most part, other personality variables, such as emotional lability, anxiety, depression, and neuroticism, have not been shown to be related to coronary disease in women. This may also be due to a true lack of effect or may be the result of not being able to separate the various manifestations of CHD and perhaps to limited sample sizes of women, which leads to a lack of power to detect at true effect. In the field of coronary heart disease epidemiology, as more studies include women and ask questions that are meaningful to them, a clearer understanding of the possible psychosocial etiology of disease will be possible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Psychosocial factors in the epidemiology of coronary heart disease in women. 265 6

In order to document the possible influence of stress limiting factors (STLF: chest pain, ST-segment depression) on exercise-induced blood lactate increase in CHD patients (post myocardial infarction) 88 males were examined in a stepwise bicycle stress test. Blood lactate samples were drawn at the end of each stress step. The patients were divided into 2 groups without (n = 45) and with (n = 43) STLF, higher blood lactate concentrations, however, were only observed in relation to the exercise intensity reached at the end of the stress test. Neither the symptom chest pain nor the degree of ST-depression showed a significant influence on the physical performance capacity and the lactate concentration at the anaerobic threshold. Nevertheless, a physical performance capacity above 1 W/kg seems to be necessary to reach the anaerobic threshold level. When the lactate measurement is used in CHD patients, the influence of age on the maximum lactate concentrations must be considered.
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PMID:Influence of symptom-limited stress on blood lactate behaviour in coronary heart disease (CHD) patients. 344 29

CHD is the major cause of morbidity and mortality in the elderly in the U.S. In this age group, the clinical presentation of CHD can be quite atypical. In general, the incidence of typical precordial chest pressure/pain denoting myocardial ischemia is less common whereas dyspnea as an anginal equivalent symptom is frequent. The diagnosis of ischemic cardiac pain is frequently confused by the many comorbid conditions present in the elderly. Even when classic ischemic precordial discomfort is present it tends to be less severe and less well defined. The elderly appear to have reduced pain perception and as a result silent myocardial ischemia is more common and carries a somewhat worse prognosis in the elderly than in younger age groups. Similarly, the presenting symptoms of acute myocardial infarction in the elderly can be nonspecific. The classic crushing substernal chest pain decreases with age whereas the symptom of dyspnea gradually increases. Neurologic symptoms, weakness, and worsening heart failure are common clinical presentations of an acute infarction in elderly patients. Silent (unrecognized) myocardial infarctions are common in the elderly and carry serious prognostic implications.
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PMID:Clinical Presentation of Coronary Artery Disease in the Elderly: How Does it Differ From the Younger Population? 1141 43

Most public education about the clinical symptoms of MI and the appropriate response to those symptoms has been designed to reach educated segments of the white population based on data gathered from white men. As a result, AAs and Korean-Americans may be less alert to chest pain, less likely to relate this symptom to heart attack, and less likely to seek treatment promptly. Our findings provide a race-specific database on CHD risk factors and types of MI symptoms, which should be of particular interest to the trauma and emergency care nurse as well as to the coronary care nurse. AAs and Koreans experienced chest pain as frequently as whites, but AAs experienced the atypical symptoms of dyspnea and fatigue more often, and Koreans experienced dyspnea, perspiration, and fatigue more often than whites. This information can be helpful in developing public education programs on MI that are sensitive to our increasingly diverse population. In the acute and critical care setting, these data assist the nurse to recognize that "classic" signs and symptoms of acute MI may not be classic for all racial and ethnic groups. This awareness can lead to more culturally sensitive assessment tools and educational interventions, earlier recognition of acute MI with more appropriate triage decisions, more aggressive treatment, and a reduction in morbidity and mortality of these high-risk groups.
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PMID:Typical and atypical symptoms of myocardial infarction among African-Americans, whites, and Koreans. 1177 40

This review describes what is known about effects of marijuana and cannabinoids in relation to human physiological and disease outcomes. The acute physiological effects of marijuana include a substantial dose-dependent increase in heart rate, generally associated with a mild increase in blood pressure. Orthostatic hypotension may occur acutely as a result of decreased vascular resistance. Smoking marijuana decreases exercise test duration in maximal exercise tests, increases the heart rate at submaximal levels of exercise. Tolerance develops to the acute effects of marijuana smoking and delta9-tetrahydrocannibol (THC) over several days to a few weeks. The cardiovascular responses that occur in response to THC are mediated by the autonomic nervous system, with recent findings also demonstrating that the human cannabinoid receptor system plays a role in regulating the cardiovascular response. Although several mechanisms exist by which marijuana use might contribute to the development of chronic cardiovascular conditions or acutely trigger cardiovascular events, there are few data regarding marijuana/THC use and cardiovascular disease outcomes. A large cohort study showed no association of marijuana use with cardiovascular disease hospitalization or mortality. However, acute effects of marijuana use include a decrease of the time until the onset of chest pain in patients with angina pectoris; one study has shown that marijuana may trigger the onset of myocardial infarction. Patients who have coronary heart disease or are at high risk for the development of CHD should be cautioned about the potential hazards of marijuana use as a precipitant for clinical events. Research directions might include more studies of cardiovascular disease outcomes and relationships of marijuana with cardiovascular risk factors, studies of metabolic and physiologic effects of chronic marijuana use that may affect cardiovascular disease risk, increased understanding of the role of the cannabinoid receptor system in cardiovascular regulation, and studies to determine if there is a therapeutic role for cannabinoids in blood pressure control or for neuroprotection after stroke.
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PMID:Cardiovascular consequences of marijuana use. 1241 38

The aim of this study was to assess the plasma levels of VEGF and interleukin-10 in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and stable chronic angina (SA) and correlate the values with traditional CHD risk factors, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and established inflammatory marker hsCRP. Fifty patients with AMI and 30 with SA were enrolled. IL-10 levels in AMI patients were lower than in SA patients (9.81 +/- 5.0 versus 22.63 +/- 8.38 pg/ml, p < 0.00001). IL-10 levels were lower in AMI and SA patients with multiple CHD risk factors than in patients < or = 2 risk factors (SA: 19.48 +/- 2.94 versus 23.77 +/- 2.94 pg/ml; p < 0.005; AMI: 8.64 +/- 4.43 versus 11.85 +/- 4.09 pg/ml; p < 0.05) and patients with AMI and single-vessel than with multi-vessel disease (8.45 +/- 3.86 versus 10.72 +/- 3.95 pg/ml; p < 0.05). VEGF levels in AMI patients were higher than in SA patients (312.0 +/- 67.0 versus 221.0 + /- 50 pg/ml; p < 0.005). VEGF levels were higher in AMI patients with multi-vessel disease than in patients with single-vessel disease (348.74 +/- 45.23 versus 252.05 +/- 21.12 pg/ml; p < 0.005), with LVEF <40% and Killip class III-IV than in patients with LVEF >40% and Killip class I-II (338.8 +/- 51.59 versus 271.8 +/- 50.51 pg/ml; p < 0.005 and 340.71 +/- 52.94 versus 275.45 +/- 49.48 pg/ml; p < 0.05, respectively) and with chest pain > 6 h versus < 6 h (330.03 +/- 58.58 versus 292 +/- 57.53 pg/ml; p < 0.05). HsCRP concentrations in AMI patients were higher than in SA (1.24 +/- 0.47 versus 0.42 +/- 0.14; p < 0.0001). HsCRP was correlated with IL-10 (r = -0.413; p < 0.05) and VEGF (r = 0.319; p < 0.05). Acute myocardial infarction is associated with elevated VEGF levels and decreased concentration of IL-10. There is a significant correlation between levels of inflamatory markers and CHD risk factors and the function of the left ventricle on admission.
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PMID:The pro- and anti-inflammatory markers in patients with acute myocardial infarction and chronic stable angina. 1525 85

Study involved 52 women (mean age 43+/-1,3) without any evidence of CHD, suffering from dull or acute prolonged non-anginal chest pain, with undergoing chronic bacterial-viral infection--Chlamydia pneumonia in combination with HSV-I, CMV and/or EBV. 30--patients serum-positive to plasma markers (IgG antibodies) of previous infection were enclosed in group I, 22--with plasma consumption of IgA+IgG antibody complex demonstrating re-infection/reactivation phase of disease--in group II and 20 healthy serum-negative females (median age 47+/-2,8 years)--controls (group III). The intergroup analysis revealed the complex of disturbances in some plasma parameters of II group patients, namely significant elevation of CRP, F and LPO activity vs. I and III group data, along with reduced parameters of immune status in both groups of infected persons. The patients with mixed infections showed the high frequency of specific re-polarization phase abnormalities, cardiac rhythm and conduction disturbances. These changes together with intimate-medial wall injuries of inflammatory origin disclosed by DS technique enables us to suggest that in women with previous chronic untreated or insufficiently treated infection, in cases of their overload activity, recurrent or super-infection may provide deep immunosuppressive conditions leading to farther cardio-vascular abnormalities.
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PMID:Chronic bacterial-viral vasculitis as manifestation of systemic inflammatory response syndrome in females. 1623 91


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