Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
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Eighty of 654 patients studied because of chest pain were found to have normal coronary arteriography. Fifty of these completed submaximal treadmill exercise studies. The purpose of this study was to determine whether treadmill electrocardiography could obviate the need for coronary arteriography in the evaluation of patients with undiagnosed chest pain. Of patients studied, 22% had typical angina pectoris, while 78% had atypical chest pain. The resting electrocardiogram was normal in 58% of patients, while 42% showed repolarization abnormalities. Submaximal treadmill testing was normal in 64%, incomplete in 12%, and demonstrated classic ischemic S-T depression in 24%. Our findings of 24% positive studies in patients with normal vessels and 12% incomplete tests suggest that stress electrocardiography may be of limited value in predicting the morphologic state of the coronary arteries in patients with undiagnosed chest pain.
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PMID:Exercise stress testing in patients with chest pain and normal coronary arteriography: with review of the literature. 122 21

Treadmill exercise test results were studied in 93 patients with chest pain who had received digitalis therapy or had nonspecific ST-T changes in the resting electrocardiogram. Results of the treadmill test were correlated with the findings of coronary angiography. A positive treadmill result was defined as horizontal or down-sloping ST segment depression greater than or equal to 1.0 mm. Of the 40 patients with no or insignificant coronary artery disease, 15 had taken digitalis; 4 of the 15 demonstrated a positive response on the treadmill test. Of the 53 patients with coronary artery disease, 21 had taken digitalis; 15 of the 21 displayed a positive response. Among the remaining 32 not on digitalis, 20 had a positive response. The specificity of the treadmill exercise test was 96% in patients with coronary artery disease not on digitalis and whose resting electrocardiogram showed nonspecific ST changes. The specificity of the treadmill test in patients who had received digitalis was 73%. Sensitivity was 63% and 71%, respectively. By utilizing more stringent criteria in the interpretation of the treadmill exercise test (greater than or equal to 1.5 mm ST depression), among the patients on digitalis only 6.7% (1/15) with normal coronary arteries and 48% (10/21) with coronary artery disease had a positive response. With the use of the latter criterion the test was specific in 93% (14/15) of the patients and is usually indicative of coronary artery disease.
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PMID:Treadmill exercise testing in the presence of digitals therapy or nonspecific ST-T changes: correlation with coronary angiography. 122 34

Short-term results of aggressive surgical management were compared with results of medical management in forty-three patients with preinfarction angina admitted to the coronary-care unit (CCU) over an 18 month period. These patients were selected from 1,609 consecutive admissions to the CCU because they met strict criteria for preinfarction angina: severe chest pain at rest, ST-segment elevation or depression during pain which subsided rapidly after cessation of pain, and normal serum enzymes (CPK, SGOT, and LDH). Twenty-three patients had coronary angiography, done with operating room and pump standby. One patient, who had total occlusion of the left main coronary artery, died during the study. Twenty-one of the remaining patients were considered surgical candidates, and were treated immediately after angiography with 1 to 3 vein bypass grafts. There was one late postoperative death and, of the 20 survivors, 2 had ECG evidence of acute myocardial infarction and one had mild angina at time of discharge. In contrast, of the 21 patients treated medically, 13 sustained acute MI, resulting in 8 instances of congestive heart failure and 4 cases of ventricular fibrillation. Four patients died in cardiogenic shock. With the use of rigid criteria, a small subgroup of patients with variant angina at high risk of developing AMI has been identified and categorized as having preinfarction angina. Our experience suggests that aggressive surgery immediately following coronary angiography offers a lower incidence of MI, morbidity, and death than does medical management.
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PMID:Management of preinfarction angina. Evaluation and comparison of medical versus surgical therapy in 43 patients. 124 46

Ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring was employed in 33 patients with angina pectoris and abnormal stress tests to determine the frequency with which myocardial ischemia manifested by painless ST-segment depression occurred during normal activity. ST-segment depression occurred in 24 patients during the monitoring period; and in 21, it occurred either solely in the absence of pain or both with and without pain. Of 109 recorded episodes of ST-segment depression, 61 percent were painless. The frequency of painless ST-segment depression was independent of activity other than automobile driving, during which all episodes were painless. In patients who smoked cigarettes, ST-segment depression was more common while smoking, but the incidence of painless ST-segment depression was not altered. The study indicates that ST-segment depression occurs more commonly in the absence than in the presence of chest pain and that ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring is a useful method of determining the frequency of myocardial ischemia during normal daily activity.
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PMID:Painless ST-segment depression in patients with angina pectoris. Correlation with daily activities and cigarette smoking. 126 12

In summary, although exercise is, as is every other procedure, imperfect with regard to sensitivity and specificity, it provides an invalualbe adjunct in the evaluation of patients with coronary disease. The test is simple, inexpensive, safe and rapidly performed and is an invaluable aid in screening patients with possible coronary disease. It is used in an asymptomatic population for industrial purposes, is useful in assessing the etiology of otherwise undiagnosed chest pain, helpful in evaluating the overall severity of ischemia [and therefore in culling-out those patients that might benefit from coronary angiography], is useful in following the course of patients with proven coronary disease [including those with acute myocardial infarction], and has found a place in the follow-up evaluation of individuals having aortocoronary bypass surgery. As a screening procedure, the treadmill test aids in seeking out that group of patients with coronary disease with potentially malignant lesions, i.e. main left coronary lesions, triple-vessel disease and [to a lesser extent] severe proximal left anterior descending coronary disease. Hence, the finding of marked depth of ST depression, prolonged duration of ischemia associated with deep ST segments, serious exercise-induced ventricular arrhythmias and hypotension produced during mild-to-moderate exercise might each be an indication of extensive coronary angiography. In many cases exercise testing is superior to coronary angiography, being a simpler, safer screening procedure, and a more functional test in documenting the presence or absence of coronary insufficiency.
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PMID:Interpretation and limitations in stress testing. 127 86

The clinical implications of isolated late recovery ST depression were tested in patients with scintigraphically defined ischemia (coronary artery disease [CAD], n = 18) compared with patients without ischemia (n = 25). Spontaneous (78.4 versus 12.0%, P < 0.008) and exercise-induced angina (44.4 versus 0%, P < 0.0001) were more frequently seen in patients with CAD. Histories of unstable angina (33.3%), prior myocardial infarction (27.8%), ST elevated angina (22.2%) and significant stenosis in the left anterior descending artery (17 of 18, 94.4%) were almost exclusively seen in the CAD group. There was no significant difference between the two groups in capacity for exercise, maximum deviation of ST level or TV2 amplitude. Balloon angioplasty abolished late recovery ST changes in 63.6% of CAD patients. These results suggest that isolated late recovery ST depression, when accompanied with typical chest pain, may be considered as an indicator of myocardial ischemia, but this phenomenon is difficult to distinguish electrocardiographically.
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PMID:Isolated post exercise delayed ST depression as a sign of severe ischemia: the influence of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. 128 36

Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is involved in experimental models of myocardial ischaemia, and PAF infusion can cause thromboxane release. Thromboxane is produced during brief episodes of reversible myocardial ischaemia in patients with coronary heart disease. To learn whether PAF synthesis is associated with thromboxane production in mild myocardial ischaemia, we performed rapid atrial pacing in four patients with angina pectoris which caused chest pain, ST segment depression (delta ST = -1.8 +/- 0.2 mm) and lactate excretion in the coronary sinus (percent lactate extraction decreased from 20 +/- 6% to -15 +/- 9%). Thromboxane B2 was produced causing a positive transmyocardial gradient (from 88 +/- 154 pg.ml-1 baseline to 1770 +/- 1407 pg.ml-1 at the peak) but there was no PAF release into coronary sinus blood. In four other patients we determined whether more pronounced ischaemia could be associated with PAF synthesis. Coronary sinus blood was sampled before and during balloon occlusion of a major coronary artery: PAF was not detected in coronary sinus, whereas percent lactate extraction decreased from 24 +/- 6% to -63 +/- 22% (n = 4). We conclude that PAF plays a minor role in short episodes of reversible ischaemia and does not participate in thromboxane production.
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PMID:Lack of platelet-activating factor release during reversible myocardial ischaemia. 128 94

Clinical presentation and course were studies in 45 consecutive patients (p)--39 males, 6 females with angiographically proven left main coronary artery stenosis (LMCA) > 50%. Mean age was 54.7 years. Three (6%) had no history of chest pain, 2 p (4%) had atypical chest pain, and the remaining (90%) had typical angina pectoris. 19 p (42%) had unstable angina, 20 p (44%) had suffered a myocardial infarction in the past. Outside an episode of chest pain most of the patients had an abnormal ECG with ST-T segment depression 2 mm or more in leads V3-6 and ST-T elevation in leads V1 and aVR. No significant differences were found when the abnormalities of the ST-T segment were compared to severity of LMCA obstruction. A symptom limited exercise test was performed in 17 (37%) p. It was abnormal in 13 p (29%). Thirty eight patients (85%) underwent bypass surgery and the mean number of bypass graft was 3.3. Seven patients were treated medically. In the surgical group four p (10.5%) died perioperatively. All of them had subtotal occlusion of LMCA, without significant lesions in the remaining coronary arteries, the ejection fraction (EF) was above 66%. Among thirty four living patients thirty have been asymptomatic. In the medically treated group 3 p (42%) died and only two of four survivors were asymptomatic at a mean follow-up 35.7 months. Left ventricle of all died patients were severely damaged (EF mean 28%), right coronary artery (RCA) was totally occluded and all had rythm disturbances. We conclude, that patients with significant LMCA stenosis had a good prognosis when treated surgically.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Constriction of the left main coronary artery. Early and long term treatment outcome]. 129 44

Six patients (2 males and 4 females, mean age of 46 years) with X syndrome were reported in this paper. All patients presented with typical exertional angina pectoris. In 4 patients the angina had a variable threshold of onset, it often occurred at rest and occasionally nocturnally. The electrocardiogram during chest pain showed ST segment depression of more than 0.05-0.1 mV in all 6 patients. The treadmill or bicycle ergometer exercise test was positive in 4 cases (ST segment depression > 0.1 mV), equivocal in 1 (ST segment < 0.1 mV) in whom the 201Tl exercise myocardial perfusion scan showed sign of ischemia, and negative in 1 in whom atrial pacing at heart rate of 135 beats/min induced angina and ST segment depression of 0.1-0.15 mV. Echocardiograms and X ray chest films revealed no sign of ventricular hypertrophy or enlargement. The 201Tl exercise myocardial perfusion scan was performed in 5 patients, which showed signs of ischemia in 4 patients and suspected to have ischemia in 1. Left ventriculograms and coronary angiograms were normal in all 6 patients. Ergonovine provoking test (total dose of 0.4 mg) was negative in 5 patients, it was not performed in 1 in whom there was no evidence of coronary artery spasm by angiogram during appearance of electrocardiographic ischemic changes and chest pain. Left ventricular endomyocardial biopsy was performed in 1 patient, which showed significant smooth muscle cell proliferation in the medial layer of a small artery with diameter of 62.5 mu which produced narrowing of the lumen.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[X syndrome--report of six cases]. 130 21

On exercise testing after an episode of unstable coronary artery disease (CAD; unstable angina or non-Q-wave myocardial infarction), a proportion of patients show ST-segment depression, indicating myocardial ischaemia, but do not report concomitant symptoms of angina. Treatment of such "silent" ischaemia aims mainly to reduce the risk of subsequent cardiac events. We have studied the effect of low-dose aspirin in patients with myocardial ischaemia defined at the predischarge test as silent (though patients might have had symptomatic ischaemia at other times) or symptomatic. 740 men with unstable CAD aged 70 years or less underwent symptom-limited exercise testing before hospital discharge; 144 showed ST depression without pain and 230 ST depression with simultaneous chest pain. Of the silent ischaemia group, 67 were randomly assigned placebo and 77 aspirin (75 mg daily); the corresponding numbers in the symptomatic group were 125 and 105. Angina symptoms were less common in the silent than in the symptomatic ischaemia group both before inclusion and during follow-up, and a greater proportion of the silent ischaemia group were included because of myocardial infarction. In both ischaemia groups aspirin treatment reduced the risk of subsequent myocardial infarction or death by 3 months' follow-up (silent 4% of aspirin-treated vs 21% of placebo-treated patients, p = 0.004; symptomatic 9% vs 18%, p = 0.05); at 12 months' follow-up a significant benefit of aspirin was still apparent in the silent ischaemia group (9% vs 28%, p = 0.005) but not in the symptomatic group (13% vs 22%, p = 0.109). Low-dose aspirin reduced the risk of subsequent myocardial infarction at least as well in silent as in symptomatic myocardial ischaemia. Since improvement of outlook is the main treatment objective in symptom-free patients, aspirin should be a mainstay of their treatment.
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PMID:Prevention of serious cardiac events by low-dose aspirin in patients with silent myocardial ischaemia. The Research Group on Instability in Coronary Artery Disease in Southeast Sweden. 135 74


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