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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We determined whether the exercise electrocardiogram predicted acute cardiac events during moderate or strenuous physical activity among 3617 asymptomatic, hypercholesterolemic men (age range, 35 to 59 years) who were followed up in the Coronary Primary Prevention Trial. Submaximal exercise test results were obtained at entry and at annual follow-up visits in years 2 through 7. ST-segment
depression
or elevation (greater than or equal to 1 mm or 10 microV-sec) was considered to be a positive test result. The circumstances that surrounded each nonfatal myocardial infarction and
coronary heart disease
death were determined through a record review. The cumulative incidence of activity-related acute cardiac events was 2% during a mean follow-up period of 7.4 years. The risk was increased 2.6-fold in the presence of clinically silent, exercise-induced, ST-segment changes at entry (95% confidence interval [Cl], 1.3 to 5.2) after adjustment for 11 other potential risk factors. Of 62 men who experienced an activity-related event, 11 had a positive test result at entry (sensitivity, 18%; 95% Cl, 8 to 27). The specificity of the entry exercise test was 92% (95% Cl, 91 to 93). The sensitivity and specificity were similar when the length of follow-up was restricted to 1 year after testing. For a newly positive test result on a follow-up visit, the sensitivity was 24% (95% Cl, 12 to 36), and the specificity was 85% (95% Cl, 84 to 86); for any positive test result during the study (mean number of tests per subject, 6.2), the sensitivity was 37% (95% Cl, 25 to 49), and the specificity was 79% (95% Cl, 77 to 80). Our findings suggested that the presence of clinically silent, exercise-induced, ischemic ST-segment changes on a submaximal test was associated with an increased risk of activity-related acute cardiac events. However, this test was not sensitive when used to predict the occurrence of activity-related events among asymptomatic, hypercholesterolemic men. For this reason, the utility of the submaximal exercise test to assess the safety of physical activity among asymptomatic men at risk of
coronary heart disease
is likely to be limited.
...
PMID:Sensitivity of exercise electrocardiography for acute cardiac events during moderate and strenuous physical activity. The Lipid Research Clinics Coronary Primary Prevention Trial. 199 60
Silent ischemia is common in diabetic patients with
coronary heart disease
. These patients may also have more subtle alteration in the perception of angina as reflected by prolongation of anginal perceptual threshold--the time from onset of 0.1 mV ST segment
depression
to the onset of chest pain during treadmill exercise. Silent ischemia may be associated with a generalized hyposensitivity to pain, although the pathophysiologic mechanism is obscure. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether diabetic patients with prolonged anginal perceptual thresholds are also hyposensitive to painful stimuli and to investigate whether this is associated with autonomic neuropathy. Nineteen diabetic and 25 nondiabetic patients with exertional angina were exercised on a treadmill to measure anginal perceptual threshold. Somatic pain threshold was measured by calf sphygmomanometry. The cuff was inflated rapidly until pain occurred, and six repeat inflations were done to test reproducibility. Because there was no significant difference between measurements (coefficient of variation = 0.156) the mean value for each patient provided a measure of somatic pain threshold. The diabetic group had a longer anginal perceptual threshold (138 +/- 64 seconds vs 34 +/- 51 seconds, p less than 0.001), which correlated positively with the somatic pain threshold (r = 0.5, p = 0.03); patients with more prolonged anginal perceptual thresholds tended to have higher somatic pain thresholds. In the diabetic group anginal perceptual (r = -0.3, p = NS) and somatic pain (r = -0.4, p = 0.05) thresholds tended to increase as the ratio of peak to minimal heart rate during the Valsalva maneuver fell below 1.21, but these variables were unrelated in the nondiabetic group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The perception of angina in diabetes: relation to somatic pain threshold and autonomic function. 159 62
Depression
is widely accepted as occurring in response to acute myocardial infarction (AMI), and to be an important determinant of recovery. A review of the literature reveals that three categories of patients with depressive symptomatology may be identifiable. First, many patients show depressive symptoms before admission with AMI; these may intensify during hospitalisation. For these patients, the depressive symptoms may contribute etiologically to the onset of AMI or derive from a common source along with AMI. The second group constitute patients with a history of AMI, and who on readmission with chest pain or suspected AMI are more likely to report depressive symptoms. The third group of patients are non-depressed first time admissions for AMI. These patients appear to show transient depressive reactions, much of which it is argued, occurs as a reaction to hospitalisation and not to AMI per se. This review considers the theoretical context whereby depressive symptoms may arise from the same circumstances that generate the
coronary heart disease
which underlies AMI, and links this to the generation of helplessness and cardiopathic processes.
...
PMID:Depression and acute myocardial infarction: a review and reinterpretation. 204 94
To study the circadian variation of cardiac performance in patients with
coronary heart disease
, three exercise tests on a bicycle ergometer were performed during the active part of the day (10 a.m., 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.), recording ST-segment
depression
and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure. Ten male patients with angiographically documented
coronary heart disease
underwent bicycle ergometry during placebo and during nitrate therapy (placebo controlled, double-blind crossover 2 x 20 mg IS-5-MN and 1 x 120 mg ISDN sustained release). During placebo as well as during nitrate therapy there was a gradual decrease of cardiac performance during the day, documented by the increase in ST-
depression
and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure at equal work loads. High nitrate concns led to a significant reduction of both ST-
depression
and preload with a marked circadian-phase dependency of cardiovascular effects.
...
PMID:Circadian variation of cardiac performance in coronary heart disease. 208 72
From a pool of patients, treated because of cardiac diseases on ward for 4 years, 8 subjects, the mean age of which amounted to 46 (SD 12) years, showing stable angina pectoris in usual physical activity, were chosen. In these patients widespread examinations including invasive procedures had not been evident for one of the well defined heart diseases. In two patients dysrhythmias appeared during standardized exercise test while in four other subjects acute cardiac findings consisted of chest pain, significant
depression
of ST segments or inversion of T waves were observed. One patient had a normal result of the exercise test. A myocardial thallium-201 imaging was performed in four subjects. In three patients imaging showed questionable or mild signs of ischemia. The result suggest the existence of unknown shapes in
coronary heart disease
, the origin of which is possibly connected with a disorder of microvascular smooth muscle reactivity.
...
PMID:[The possible significance of coronary vascular resistance in chronic ischemic heart disease]. 209 86
The therapeutic efficiency of the long-term nitrates in
coronary heart disease
with exercise-induced heart insufficiency is recently more frequently called in question by observations of a nitrate tolerance. In own long-term studies on 34 patients with
coronary heart disease
with clinical and haemodynamic evidence (pathologic increase of the end-diastolic pressure of the pulmonary arteries under ergometric load) of an exercise-induced heart insufficiency the efficacy of pentaerythril tetranitrate (PETN) and isosorbide dinitrate (ISDN) in chronic dosage titration use was tested. The oral nitrate therapy evoked a clear decrease of the end-diastolic pressure of the pulmonary arteries. The reduction of the values of the pressure of the pulmonary arteries was correlated with adequate clinical findings (significant decrease of the frequency of pectanginous attacks and of the sublingual need of GTN, regression of the ST segment
depression
). The own results with particular valuation of the microcatherisation of the right heart on exertion plead against a clinically remarkable nitrate tolerance and confirm the efficiency of the at present usual basic medicamentous therapy in patients with
coronary heart disease
and exercise-induced heart insufficiency.
...
PMID:[Long-term nitrate therapy in coronary heart disease--loss of effect by developing tolerance]. 212 17
These findings permit the following conclusions on cardiac changes induced by high-performance sports and high levels of training. Sinus bradycardia and AV block can frequently be observed in athletes, but they do not require attention as long as they are asymptomatic or do not produce pauses exceeding 4 seconds. Persistent rather than transient second-degree AV block or Mobitz second- or third-degree AV block is an extremely unusual finding even in athletes and should be considered a sign of organic lesions until proved otherwise. Supraventricular and AV node ectopic beats are not more frequent in athletes than in the general population except for atrial fibrillation. WPW syndrome is of particular importance, since rapid conduction to the ventricle via the accessory AV pathway is possible, especially if there is a tendency toward atrial fibrillation. Likewise caution is required in athletes with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Here hemodynamic deterioration must be anticipated with the occurrence of supraventricular tachycardia. Simple ventricular arrhythmias occur among athletes with the same frequency as in the general population, but they usually disappear with exercise. The occurrence of complex ventricular forms of arrhythmia should always prompt cardiologic examination in search of underlying cardiac disease, particularly hypertrophic or dilated cardiomyopathy. The presence of ventricular arrhythmias without evidence of underlying heart disease does not indicate a special or increased risk of sudden cardiac death. A higher incidence of right and/or left ventricular hypertrophy, exercise-reversible ST elevation, and exercise-reversible changes in T waves (T negativity, sharp and/or excessive T waves) can be considered physiologic changes in the ECGs of athletes. These changes correlate closely with the type of sports activity and degree of training and are reversible when the activity is stopped. Horizontal ST segment
depression
are by contrast very rare in athletes and should always be clarified by cardiologic examination. Exercise-induced sudden cardiac death in athletes is unusual without preexisting heart disease. The cause of sudden cardiac death among athletes less than 40 years of age can be predominantely ascribed to congenital heart diseases (such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or coronary anomalies). In athletes more than 40 years of age and with increasing age,
coronary heart disease
is the most frequent autopsy finding. A corresponding risk stratification should take these partial dangers into account.
...
PMID:ECG variants and cardiac arrhythmias in athletes: clinical relevance and prognostic importance. 219 78
Out of 432 patients with
coronary heart disease
, 106 (24.5%) were found to have transient myocardial infarction during ECG monitoring of ST segment for 10 hours of daily activity. High-grade ventricular arrhythmias were revealed in 74.6% of mainly male and middle-aged subjects. 63.4% of the patients exhibited congestive heart failure, 48.1% had postinfarct cardiosclerosis, and 25.5% presented with diabetes mellitus. Transient myocardial ischemia was more frequently detected during exercise and more rarely during emotional stress (21.7%), meal (19.8%), and smoking (7.8%). Asymptomatic episodes of ST segment elevation were recorded in 36.8%, while asymptomatic episodes of ST segment
depression
, in 29.2%. The duration of asymptomatic episodes of ST segment elevation and
depression
was twice and 1.5 times, respectively, less than that of symptomatic ones. Substantial myocardial perfusion and metabolic impairments were revealed with an asymptomatic ST segment
depression
frequency of at least one an hour, an amplitude of more than 2 mm, and a duration of no less than 40 min.
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of transient myocardial ischemia]. 223 60
The paper proposes new criteria for differential diagnosis of myocardial "focal scarring" and "++pseudo-scarring" changes in various cardiac abnormalities and homogeneous morphological alterations in the ventricular complex on ECG (the QS, Qr-type abnormalities of the R line) by using the findings of 35 lead ECG mapping (PM-35). ECG-12 and PM-35 were analysed in 427 patients, including those with
coronary heart disease
(n-122), arterial hypertension and aortic malformations (n-130), dilated cardiomyopathy, congenital cardiac disease (n-175). Electrocardiographic signs of focal scarring lesions were revealed in all the cases with
coronary heart disease
and 66 with myocardial hypertrophy. The total value of ST segment
depression
and the sum of Q wave squares in three to five vertical mapping columns were found to be the most significant differential and diagnostic criterion. When scars and ++pseudo-scars were differentiated, a sensitivity of 75% was obtained at a specificity of 87%.
...
PMID:[Use of integral indicators of precordial mapping in differential diagnosis of focal-cicatricial lesions of the myocardium]. 223 65
The study was undertaken to examine 35 patients with chronic
coronary heart disease
and 20 patients with neurocirculatory dystonia concurrent with the cardialgic syndrome, the latter were enrolled into a control group. Detection of sigma R in the standard leads of resting ECG and at the peak of atrial pacing made it possible to single out groups of chronic
coronary heart disease
patients, which differed in clinical manifestations of the disease, myocardial contractility, hemodynamics, and myocardial lactate extraction. In patients with chronic
coronary heart disease
ti is recommended to use ECG measurements (sigma R and nST) in the standard leads during loading tests to give a comprehensive characterization of the pump function and the severity of myocardial ischemia, the prognosis of the natural history of the disease and risk for myocardial infarction. To enhance the sensitivity and specificity of loading tests, it is recommended to take into account higher sigma R in combination with ST segment
depression
when the results of the tests are assessed.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic and prognostic value of quantitative indicators of 12 ECG leads in ischemic heart disease]. 223 66
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