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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The relations between reciprocal ST segment depression in the electrocardiogram and infarct size and 10 year prognosis were studied in 315 patients who survived for at least 28 days after a first anterior or inferior myocardial infarction. ST depression was more common in inferior infarcts (72%) than in anterior (37%) ones. It occurred more frequently in complicated infarcts and in the presence of considerable ST elevation. Patients experiencing second or third degree heart block were significantly more likely to show reciprocal changes. The rise in peak cardiac enzyme concentration was higher in patients showing ST depression. In patients with ST depression, peak creatine kinase concentration was 46% higher, aspartate aminotransferase was 39% higher, and lactate dehydrogenase 29% higher after correction for site and complications. A discriminant function analysis selected infarct site, peak aspartate aminotransferase, and magnitude of ST elevation as predictors of the occurrence of ST depression. Age, severity, and smoking status did not significantly improve discrimination. Despite larger increases in peak enzyme concentrations patients with ST depression had marginally fewer subsequent episodes of unstable angina or fatal or non-fatal infarction and a marginally lower 10 year death rate. Neither difference was statistically significant. ST depression occurring early in the acute phase of myocardial infarction is likely to be a reflection of electrophysiological changes taking place at the site of the infarct that is manifested in the contralateral surface of the heart. Other causes, however, such as transient ischaemia at the site of the reciprocal changes or extension of the infarct to contiguous areas cannot be excluded in all cases.
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PMID:The aetiology and prognostic implications of reciprocal electrocardiographic changes in acute myocardial infarction. 370 82

The clinical significance of anterior precordial ST segment depression during acute inferior myocardial infarction was evaluated in 67 consecutive patients early after onset of symptoms with gated blood pool scans, thallium-201 perfusion images, and 12-lead ECGs. Patients with anterior ST depression (n = 33) had depressed mean values for left ventricular ejection fraction (54 +/- 2% [mean +/- S.E.M.] vs 59 +/- 2%; p = 0.02), cardiac index (3.1 +/- 0.2 vs 3.6 +/- 0.2 L/m2; p = 0.03), and ratio of systolic blood pressure to end-systolic volume (2.0 +/- 0.1 vs 2.5 +/- 0.3 mm Hg/ml; p = 0.04) compared to patients with no anterior ST depression (n = 34). Patients with anterior ST depression had (1) lower mean wall motion values for the inferior, apical, and inferior posterolateral segments (p less than 0.05) and (2) greater reductions in thallium-201 uptake in the inferior and posterolateral regions (p less than 0.05). However, anterior and septal (1) wall motion and (2) thallium-201 uptake were similar in patients with and without ST depression. Thus, anterior precordial ST segment depression in patients with acute inferior wall myocardial infarction represents more than a reciprocal electrical phenomenon. It identifies patients with more severe wall motion impairment and greater hypoperfusion of the inferior and adjacent segments. The poorer global left ventricular function in these patients is a result of more extensive inferior infarction and not of remote septal or anterior injury.
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PMID:Anterior ST segment depression in acute inferior myocardial infarction as a marker of greater inferior, apical, and posterolateral damage. 378 68

19 patients with transitory ST-segment depression in the wall opposite the infarcted territory during acute transmural myocardial infarction (AMI) were studied. We investigated the reproducibility of this reciprocal ST depression induced by stress testing and correlated the ECG changes with coronary angiographic evaluation of arteries supplying the remote area. We tried to derive criteria for detection of simple mirror image. 3 different groups were defined according to ECG evolution: Group 1 consisted of 7 anterior and 3 inferior AMI where reciprocal ECG changes disappeared appeared within 24 to 48 hours independently of the ECG changes in the infarcted area. These ST depressions were reproduced by stress testing one to two months later, and correlated angiographically with an anatomic lesion. 7 out of 10 patients later had bypass graft surgery. Group 2 consisted of 7 patients in whom posterior wall extension of an inferior AMI made the diagnosis of anterior ischemia impossible. In another two patients (one anterior and one inferior AMI) reciprocal ST depression and infarcted area ECG changes showed a simultaneous evolution. The reciprocal ST depression could not be reproduced during stress testing and did not correlate with any angiographic lesion. It is concluded that reciprocal ST depression during the acute phase of transmural anterior or purely inferior myocardial infarction is correlated with multivessel coronary disease if their regression is not strictly simultaneous to the infarction-related ECG changes. Further investigations are indicated in these patients.
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PMID:[Significance of reciprocal ST-segment depression in the acute stage of transmural myocardial infarct]. 382 17

We report on 11 pts affected by acute inferior myocardial infarction (group A: 4 pts without precordial ST-segment depression; group B: 7 pts with ST precordial ST-segment depression). These pts underwent left and right coronarography and left ventriculography in the course of intracoronary thrombolysis. We did not observe, in the group B pts, an involvement of the LAD branch of the left coronary, neither contractility abnormalities of the left ventricular anterior wall. ST depression in the precordial leads was associated with severe and extensive abnormalities of left ventricular inferior wall contractility.
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PMID:[Lower myocardial infarct with depression of the ST segment in anterior precordial leads. Correlation of the electrocardiogram, coronarography and ventriculography performed in the acute phase]. 383 Jul 60

A group of 123 consecutive patients with acute transmural inferior myocardial infarction were compared according to the presence or absence of precordial ST segment depression on admission to hospital. There was a significant increase in mean age, peak creatine kinase levels, and the incidence of left ventricular failure and high grade atrioventricular block in the group with precordial ST segment depression. There was also an increase in in-hospital mortality in this group but this difference was not significant. Despite these differences in in-hospital progress, during a follow-up period of over two years there was no difference in long term mortality, recurrence of angina, or subsequent cardiac-related admissions between the two groups.
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PMID:Long term follow-up of inferior myocardial infarction. Prognostic significance of precordial ST segment depression. 386 34

Of 32 patients with inferior myocardial infarction undergoing coronary angiography in the first 6 hours for intracoronary streptokinase thrombolysis, 19 (Group I) had ST depression of more than 1 mm in the anterior chest wall leads (VI-V4) whilst 13 (Group II) had no ST changes in these leads. Quantitative analysis of left ventricular angiograph showed a significantly lower ejection fraction in Group I (52 +/- 8.5%) compared to Group II (59 +/- 8%, p less than 0.05) and that this difference was due to a greater zone of inferior wall hypokinesia, irrespective of whether this was assessed by measuring its surface area (HKS cm2: Gr I: 11 +/- 6, Gr II: 4 +/- 3, p less than 0.01) or percentage ventricular perimeter (HK%: Group I 45 +/- 15, Group II 26 +/- 12, p less than 0.001). On the other hand, anterior wall motion was normal in both groups. Coronary angiography showed proximal obstruction of the right coronary artery in 84% of patients in Group I. In Group II, the coronary obstruction tended to be distal or incomplete. The prevalence and average severity of associated stenosis of the left anterior descending artery were the same in both populations. The success rate of thrombolysis was not significantly different between the two groups. In successful procedures with a patent artery on the 14th day, improved regional contractility was only observed in Group I (HKS cm2: 11.5 +/- 6 vs 8 less than 4.4, p less than 0.05; HK%: 47 +/- 14 vs 38 +/- 9, p less than 0.05): the hypokinetic zone was unchanged in Group II.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Anterior lead ST-segment depression in inferior wall infarction. Early angiographic study. Effect on the results of intracoronary thrombolysis]. 393 87

Reciprocal changes of the ST segment in the acute phase of inferior myocardial infarction are common but their significance remain controversial. We studied this problem by comparing the ECG on admission of 83 patients with acute inferior myocardial infarction, with the clinical outcome and haemodynamic and angiographic data obtained on average 3 weeks after the onset of symptoms. Fifty nine patients (Group I) had ST depression greater than or equal to 1 mm in at least one of the leads V1 to V4; 24 patients (Group II) had no ST depression in this territory. The patients in Group I were older (59.6 +/- 6.4 vs 54 +/- 5.3 years, p less than 0.01), had higher total CPK (1 835 +/- 940 vs 875 +/- 305, p less than 0.01) and MB fractions (269 +/- 102 vs 95 +/- 35), more complications during the hospital period (80%, mainly haemodynamic vs 38%, p less than 0.01) and more severe left ventricular dysfunction: ejection fraction 52.2 +/- 6% vs 59.2 +/- 7%, p less than 0.05; cardiac index 2.75 +/- 0.4 l/min/m2 vs 3.25 +/- 0.3 l/min/m2, p less than 0.005). There was no difference in left ventricular wall motion between the groups on biplane angiography. However, coronary angiography showed left coronary disease to be more common in Group I (84%) than in Group II (37%), p less than 0.005. Left anterior descending and left circumflex disease was equally common. Patients with persistent ST depression after 48 hours had lower ejection fractions than those in whom it regressed within 48 hours.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Significance of ST segment depression in the precordial leads during the acute phase of inferior myocardial infarction]. 393 12

The authors report their experience of 2D echocardiography in the acute stage of myocardial infarction. One hundred patients, 60 men and 40 women, aged 60 +/- 4.5 years (range 32 to 69 years) were admitted to hospital with an uncomplicated inferior myocardial infarction and underwent 2D echocardiography on admission and coronary angiography 15 days later. Ten patients were excluded because unsatisfactory quality of the echocardiographic images. Forty-seven patients had initial ST depression of at least 1 mm in leads V1 to V4 (Group I) and 43 patients did not show these electrical changes (Group II). There were no significant differences in the clinical findings or in the cardiovascular risk factors between the 2 groups. On the other hand, inaugural necrosis was commoner in Group II (p less than 0.03) and cardiomegaly and CPK elevation greater in Group I (p less than 0.02). 2D echocardiography demonstrated the same degree of posterior wall hypokinesia or akinesia in the 2 groups. Septal hypokinesia was observed twice as commonly in Group I (p less than 0.03) both at echocardiography and ventriculography. Haemodynamic and angiographic data showed that double and triple vessel disease was commoner (p less than 0.05), that left anterior descending disease was more severe (p less than 0.03), left ventricular end diastolic pressure was higher (p less than 0.02) and the ejection fraction lower (p less than 0.02) in Group I, compared with Group II.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Detection of disease of the anterior interventricular artery by 2-dimensional echocardiography in acute inferior infarction. Comparison with the electrocardiographic data]. 393 21

40 patients with acute inferior myocardial infarction (MI) associated with persistent precordial ST segment depression greater than or equal to 0.1 mV underwent coronary arteriography and left ventriculography within 5-6 days of their admission. The inferior MI was the result of complete occlusion of the right coronary artery (RCA) in 38 patients and the result of complete occlusion of the posterior descending artery (PDA) coming off the circumflex artery (Cx) in two patients. 36 (90%) of the 40 patients showed one or more severe stenoses in the left anterior descending artery (LAD). 12 of the 36 patients had severe triple vessel disease. The 36 patients whose coronary arteriograms showed significant LAD stenosis had an emergency coronary artery by pass graft (CABG) operation. Soon afterwards the precordial leads were normal and the patients free of angina till their discharge from hospital. We conclude that a persistent precordial ST segment greater than or equal to 0.1 mV depression in acute inferior MI is highly predictive of significant LAD disease.
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PMID:The significance of a persistent precordial ST segment greater than or equal to 0.1 mV depression in acute inferior myocardial infarction (coronary angiographic and ventriculographic findings). 394 35

Thirty-eight patients underwent left ventricular angiography and coronary arteriography within the first 6 hours of inferior myocardial infarction, in an attempt at intracoronary thrombolysis with streptokinase. Twenty-three of these patients presented with ST segment depression of more than 1 mm on the anterior leads (V1 to V4) of ECGs done immediately before the attempt at thrombolysis (group I), whereas 15 did not (group II). Quantitative analysis of left ventricular angiography showed an ejection fraction significantly lower in group I (51 +/- 10%) than in group II (59 +/- 7%; p less than 0.01). This difference was the result of inferior hypokinesia which was larger both in surface area (group I = 11.5 +/- 6.5 cm2; group II = 4.2 +/- 2.7 cm2; p less than 0.001) and in percentage of ventricular perimeter (group I = 46 +/- 14%; group II = 27 +/- 12%; p less than 0.001). The prevalence of a left anterior descending artery lesion and the degree of stenosis were the same in both groups. The success rate of thrombolysis was not significantly different. However, in cases of persistent success, there was an improvement of regional contraction only in group I, as opposed to absence of change in group II. These results suggest that patients with inferior myocardial infarction and ST anterior depression have an extensive ischemic area rather than anterior wall ischemia. An attempt at coronary thrombolysis seems to be worthwhile only in these patients, as it results in appreciable myocardial salvage when successful.
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PMID:Anterior ST depression in inferior myocardial infarction: correlation with results of intracoronary thrombolysis. 395 56


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