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Microvascular angina - chest pain syndrome in the presence of angiographically normal epicardial coronary arteries and reduced flow reserve - has been also described in patients with essential hypertension and it has been linked to the development of left ventricular hypertrophy. Dipyridamole-Echocardiography Test (DET: 2D-echo and 12 lead ECG monitoring with dipyridamole infusion, up to 0.84 mg/kg over 10') was performed in 28 essential hypertensives meeting the following inclusion criteria; 1) history of chest pain; 2) angiographically normal coronary arteries; 3) normal resting regional and global left ventricular function. A group of 12 (age and sex matched) normotensives with the same inclusion criteria, as well as with negative exercise stress test, was also evaluated. During DET, none, either in essential hypertensives or in control group, developed a regional dyssynergy of contraction; 15 in essential hypertensives, and 2 in control group had a diagnostic (greater than 0.1 mVolt from baseline) ST segment depression on ECG tracing (54 vs 17% p less than 0.01); 16 in essential hypertensives and 2 in control group had chest pain (57 vs 17%, p less than 0.01). None of the control group and 9 of the essential hypertensives had echocardiographically assessed left ventricular hypertrophy. In the essential hypertensives group, ventricular hypertrophy was present in 7/20 patients with and in 2/8 patients without dipyridamole induced chest pain and/or ST segment depression (35 vs 25%, p = ns). In conclusion, essential hypertensives patients with chest pain and angiographically normal coronary arteries frequently show "echocardiographically silent" angina and/or ST segment depression during DET. The presence of ventricular hypertrophy does not appear to be a prerequisite for the induction of angina in these patients.
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PMID:[The dipyridamole-echo-ECG test in hypertensives with microvascular angina]. 253 Apr 14

Microvascular angina--chest pain syndrome in the presence of angiographically normal epicardial coronary arteries and reduced flow reserve--has been described in patients with essential hypertension (EH) and linked to the development of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). We performed a dipyridamole-echocardiography test (DET: 2D-echo and 12 lead ECG monitoring with dipyridamole infusion, up to 0.84 mg/kg over ten minutes) in 28 essential hypertensives meeting the following inclusion criteria: (1) history of chest pain; (2) angiographically normal coronary arteries; (3) normal resting regional and global left ventricular function. A group of 12 (age- and sex-matched) normotensives with the same inclusion criteria, as well as with negative exercise stress test, was also evaluated. During DET, none of the essential hypertensives or the control group developed a regional dyssynergy of contraction. Fifteen essential hypertensives and two in the control group had a diagnostic (greater than 0.1 mV from baseline) ST segment depression on ECG tracing (54 v 17%, P less than .01); 16 essential hypertensives and two in the control group had chest pain (57 v 17%, P less than .01). None of the control group and nine of the essential hypertensives had echocardiographically assessed LVH. In the essential hypertensive group ventricular hypertrophy was present in seven of 20 patients with and in two of eight patients without dipyridamole induced chest pain and/or ST segment depression (35% v 25%, P = NS). In conclusion, essential hypertensive patients with chest pain and angiographically normal coronary arteries frequently show echocardiographically silent angina and/or ST segment depression during DET.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Dipyridamole-echocardiography test in essential hypertensives with chest pain and angiographically normal coronary arteries. 291 48

We studied 83 men, who had a chest pain syndrome, no prior history of myocardial infarction, and exercise-induced horizontal or downsloping ST segment depression greater than or equal to 0.2 mV. The 38 patients unable to complete Bruce stage II had a significant increased risk of coronary (0.97 vs 0.71) and multivessel (0.88 vs 0.61) disease (p less than 0.01) compared to the pretest risk; data obtained from exercise-reperfusion thallium scintigraphy and cardiac fluoroscopy did not alter the risk of coronary or multivessel disease. The 45 patients who had ST depression greater than or equal to 0.2 mV and a peak work capacity greater than or equal to Bruce stage III did not have a significant increased risk of coronary (0.76) or multivessel disease (0.44). When both exercise-reperfusion thallium scintigraphy and cardiac fluoroscopy were abnormal in this latter patient subgroup, the post-test risk of multivessel disease was increased from 0.44 to 0.82 (p less than 0.03); when both tests were normal, none of the patients had multivessel disease (p less than 0.03) and only 0.18 had coronary artery disease. Thus, cardiac fluoroscopy and exercise thallium scintigraphy increase the diagnostic content of the strongly positive exercise ECG, particularly in men who have a peak work capacity greater than or equal to Bruce stage III.
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PMID:Diagnostic impact of thallium scintigraphy and cardiac fluoroscopy when the exercise ECG is strongly positive. 646 63

Several diagnostic noninvasive tests to detect coronary and multivessel coronary disease are available for women. However, all are imperfect and it is not yet clear whether one particular test provides substantially more information than others. The aim of this study was to evaluate clinical findings, exercise electrocardiography, exercise thallium myocardial scintigraphy and cardiac fluoroscopy in 92 symptomatic women without previous infarction and determine which tests were most useful in determining the presence of coronary disease and its severity. Univariate analysis revealed two clinical, eight exercise electrocardiographic, seven myocardial scintigraphic and seven fluoroscopic variables predictive of coronary or multivessel disease with 70% or greater stenosis. The multivariate discriminant function analysis selected a reversible thallium defect, coronary calcification and character of chest pain syndrome (p less than 0.05) as the variables most predictive of presence or absence of coronary disease. The ranked order of variables most predictive of multivessel disease were cardiac fluoroscopy score, thallium score and extent of ST segment depression in 14 electrocardiographic leads. Each provided statistically significant information to the model. The estimate of predictive accuracy was 89% for coronary disease and 97% for multivessel coronary disease. The results suggest that cardiac fluoroscopy or thallium scintigraphy provide significantly more diagnostic information than exercise electrocardiography in women over a wide range of clinical patient subsets.
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PMID:Noninvasive diagnostic test choices for the evaluation of coronary artery disease in women: a multivariate comparison of cardiac fluoroscopy, exercise electrocardiography and exercise thallium myocardial perfusion scintigraphy. 673 58

Exercise two-dimensional (2-D) echocardiography was performed in patients with suspected coronary artery disease, and exercise induced left ventricular asynergy was evaluated qualitatively and was compared with the coronary artery stenosis and electrocardiographic ST changes. Subjects were 12 patients with angina of effort, 8 patients with spontaneous angina, 8 patients with chest pain syndrome with the normal coronary artery, and 7 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Cases with myocardial infarction were excluded from this study. 1) Left ventricular asynergy during exercise was observed in 10 and ST depression in 11 of 12 patients with angina of effort. In patients with spontaneous angina, left ventricular asynergy and ST depression during exercise were observed in 2 of 8 patients without anginal pain, and both patients had coronary artery stenosis of 90% or more. 2) Exercise induced asynergy was also observed in 4 of 7 patients with HCM without coronary artery stenosis. It seemed likely that the markedly hypertrophied myocardium and impairment of left ventricular compliance and relaxation may induce relative myocardial ischemia.
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PMID:[Exercise two-dimensional echocardiography: correlation between exercise induced asynergy and coronary artery lesions]. 717 21

Angina from coronary artery spasm is not rare. Because new and effective medical therapy is now available, it is imperative that the physician recognize this syndrome when it occurs. Coronary artery spasm can present clinically as unstable rest angina with reversible ST-segment elevation and bradyarrhythmias and tachyarrhythmias. In this setting, Prinzmetal's variant angina is generally promptly recognized and appropriately treated. The diagnosis is variant angina, however, often is not so obvious. Chest pain may be exertional or seem noncardiac in origin. The chest pain syndrome may be chronic and stable as well as unstable. The ECG may show ST-segment depression, rather than elevation. Five cases of coronary artery spasm that emphasize the variable features of variant angina and offer aid for the prompt diagnosis and treatment of the syndrome are presented here.
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PMID:The spectrum of coronary artery spasm. The variable variant. 724 83

Chest pain because of a disorder of the coronary circulation is assumed to be ischemic in nature. Irrespective of the underlying pathophysiological mechanism, it is accepted that all routes lead to myocardial ischemia in the pathway to anginal pain. The authors describe a patient with a history of vasoactive disorders including migraine, asthma, documented variant angina with prolonged episodes of chest pain, and scintigraphic evidence of inferior and posterior wall ischemia during exercise and ergonovine testing in the absence of significant underlying stenoses. Remarkably, severe retrosternal chest pain, ST segment depression in multiple leads, and relative increased uptake in the inferior and posterior walls on Tc-99m sestamibi tomographic images developed during pharmacologic coronary vasodilatation with dipyridamole, leading the authors to speculate as to the possible existence of a nonischemic chest pain syndrome caused by coronary vasodilatation either in association with variant angina or as a separate entity.
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PMID:Is cardiac migraine a clinical entity? 762 41

We reviewed patients with normal or near-normal coronary angiograms enrolled in the SPAM contrast stress echocardiographic diagnostic study in which 400 patients with chest pain syndrome of suspected cardiac origin with a clinical indication to coronary angiography were enrolled. Patients underwent dipyridamole contrast stress echocardiography (cSE) with sequential analysis of wall motion, myocardial perfusion, and Doppler coronary flow reserve before elective coronary angiography. Ninety-six patients with normal or near-normal epicardial coronary arteries were screened for the presence of 2 prespecified findings: severely tortuous coronary arteries and myocardial bridging. Patients were divided in 2 groups based on the presence (false-positive results, n = 37) or absence (true-negative results, n = 59) of reversible myocardial perfusion defects during cSE and compared for history and clinical and angiographic characteristics. Prevalence of severely tortuous coronary arteries (35% vs 5%, p <0.001) or myocardial bridging (13% vs 2%, p <0.05) was 7 times higher in patients who demonstrated reversible perfusion defects at cSE compared to those without reversible perfusion defects. No significant differences were found between the 2 groups for the main demographic variables and risk factors. Patients in the false-positive group more frequently had a history of effort angina (p <0.001) and ST-segment depression at treadmill electrocardiography (p <0.001). In conclusion, we hypothesize that patients with a positive myocardial perfusion finding at cSE but without obstructive epicardial coronary artery disease have a decreased myocardial blood flow reserve, which may be caused by a spectrum of causes other than obstructive coronary artery disease, among which severely tortuous coronary arteries/myocardial bridging may play a significant role.
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PMID:Severe coronary tortuosity or myocardial bridging in patients with chest pain, normal coronary arteries, and reversible myocardial perfusion defects. 2178 82

We report a case of a 37-year-old woman who presented to our hospital with retrosternal chest pain following intramuscular administration of epinephrine due to presumed anaphylaxis. On arrival, she was found to have ST segment depression in the anterolateral leads on ECG and elevated cardiac troponins. She was diagnosed with stress cardiomyopathy based on left ventricle dysfunction and angiographically normal coronary arteries on cardiac catheterisation. To the best of our knowledge, this is the third reported case of takotsubo cardiomyopathy following appropriately dosed intramuscular administration of epinephrine for anaphylaxis. This case highlights the importance of considering stress cardiomyopathy in patients presenting with chest pain syndrome following systemic administration of epinephrine.
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PMID:Rare case of stress cardiomyopathy due to intramuscular epinephrine administration. 2726 85