Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have seen a case with spasm of the right coronary artery coming on during exercise ergometry in the course of a coronary arteriogram. The patient had angina pectoris spontaneously and on exercise. Bicycle ergometry was repeated four times by the same method, and was positive in three; in two of these there was angina and ST elevation in II, III, aVF, and ST depression in I, aVL and V2 to V5. On one occasion the test was negative, the patient having taken a trinitrin tablet one hour before the test. Repeating the exercise test during coronary arteriography showed spasm of the right coronary artery and elevation of the segment ST in II, III and aVF; this disappeared after trinitrin treatment.
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PMID:[Coronary spasm on exercise. Demonstration of a case by coronary angiography]. 10 83

31 patients presenting with Prinzmetal variant angina were divided into three groups according to their angiographic appearances. Group I comprised 9 patients with normal or coronary arteries with lesions less than 50% narrowing. Group II comprised 12 patients with single vessel disease. Group III comprised the other 10 patients with significant lesions on two or all three principal arteries. No clinical or electrocardiographical differences were found between the groups as to age, sex or the clinicapresentation of the chest pain. Most patients with normal or nearly normal coronary arteries had normal electrol cardiogrammes between attacjs (8 out of 9) and electrical changes mainly over the inferior wall (8 out of 9). Exercise electrocardiography reproduced ST elevation in 4 of the 9 patients but, in contrast to the patients in the other two groups, never ST depression. However, these features are not specific for patients in Group I as they were observed in 4 patients in the other two groups. Spontaneous or induced coronary spasm were observed in 27 patients, confirming its role as the mechanism of Prinzmetal angina, whatever the anatomical appearance of the coronary tree.
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PMID:[Clinical and angiographic study and pathogenic mechanism of Prinzmetal's angina. Apropos of 31 cases]. 10 80

Chest pain induced by ergometrine was associated with ST depression and subsequent elevation in anterior leads in a 42-year-old man suffering from angina at rest. Coronary arteriography during the attack showed that coronary arterial spasm of different degrees was responsible for chest pain and both types of electrocardiographic abnormality.
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PMID:Coronary artery spasm of different degrees as cause of angina at rest with ST segment depression and elevation. 47 28

3 patients with different clinical and electrocardiographic manifestations of coronary artery spasm are discussed. All 3 patients had anginal attacks at rest. In addition, 2 of these patients, who did not have significant preexisting narrowing of their coronary arteries, also had anginal pain related to exercise. During pain, 1 patient showed ST-segment elevation, the other ST-segment depression, while the third showed ST-segment depression shortly followed by ST-elevation on the electrocardiogram. At coronary angiography, spontaneous or induced spasm of one of the major coronary arteries could be demonstrated in all 3 patients. In 2 cases, sublingual nitroglycerin failed to completely relieve the spasm. This raises the question whether a residual stenosis after NTG conclusively proves a fixed organic narrowing. It is concluded that the clinical spectrum of spasm of the coronary arteries is wider than was originally reported by Prinzmetal and coworkers. Clinical and electrocardiographic manifestations are probably dependent on the site and severity of the spasm, which may cause different degrees of myocardial ischemia.
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PMID:Variant forms of angina pectoris. 71 Apr 90

Intracranial pressure (ICP) was recorded continuously in 12 pre-operative patients with angiographic evidence of diffuse cerebral arterial spasm due to a ruptured intracranial aneurysm. Recordings were made for 1 to 7 days, starting within 13 days after the haemorrhage. 1. An increased ICP was observed in the first week after subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) in 4 of the patients without any signs of angiographic arterial spasm. 2. This initial increase was regularly followed by a depression of ICP in between 7--12 days after SAH. In 11 out of 12 patients such a depression was concomitant with the beginning of arterial spasm. During the period of depressed ICP pattern, 6 patients showed little or no neurological deterioration, whereas 5 patients showed impaired consciousness or neurological deficits. 3. A secondary rise of ICP thereafter always followed due to ischaemic brain swelling or infarction, and was usually associated with a serious neurological deterioration. 4. Continuous ventricular drainage was performed to control the secondary increased ICP in 7 patients who survived, 4 of them with good clinical improvement and 3 with severe neurological deficits. 5. In the stage of depressed ICP, the administration of isoproterenol and steroids is recommended in order to try to alleviate the secondary rise of ICP.
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PMID:Intracranial pressure in patients with diffuse cerebral arterial spasm following ruptured intracranial aneurysms. 72 63

Ergonovine maleate (Ergotrate) was given to 57 patients undergoing coronary arteriography for investigation of angina occurring at rest or without provocation when routine study showed normal arteries or insufficient occlusive disease to explain their symptoms. This provocative test induced coronary arterial spasm in 13 patients, 10 of whom had definite Prinzmetal's angina. The spasm was easily reversed with sublingually administered nitroglycerin. The spasm was occlusive or nearly occlusive in nine patients, and there was associated reproduction of the chest pain and S-T elevation similar to the spontaneous episodes. One patient with Prinzmetal's angina had S-T depression rather than elevation in association with the chest pain. The other three patients without Prinzmetal's angina had focal narrowing without coronary occlusion, reproduction of the chest pain or electrocardiographic changes. Of the 44 patients who did not demonstrate coronary spasm in response to ergonovine, 29 had normal coronary arteries and 15 had various degrees of atherosclerotic occlusive disease. We conclude that cautious administration of ergonovine maleate during coronary arteriography can be safely used to elicit coronary spasm in some patients who have insufficient fixed occlusive disease to explain their symptoms.
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PMID:Provocation of coronary spasm with ergonovine maleate. New test with results in 57 patients undergoing coronary arteriography. 91 Jul 12

The study of 46 patients with frequent anginal episodes characterized by S-T elevation (so called "variant angina pectoris") demonstrated that this type of electrocardiographic pattern does not characterize a homogeneous group of patients. In fact, while in some patients angina occurred only at rest, in others it occurred also on exercise. Sometimes ecgraphic alterations characterized by S-T depression were observed on the same leads which on other occasions had shown S-T elevation. The angiographic picture revealed: absence of significant coronary alterations in 10% of cases, stenosis greater than 75% in one main branch in 29%, in two branches in 39% and in three branches in 22% of cases. The hemodynamic monitoring carried out on 14 of these patients demonstrated that the ecgraphic modifications occur before the onset of the hemodynamic parameters which control myocardial O2 consumption. This suggests a primitive reduction of regional myocardial blood supply as a cause of the ischaemic episodes. The study of the regional myocardial perfusion with 201Tl technique in 6 patients confirmed this hypothesis. Coronary angiography carried out during an ischemic episode showed that the reduction of myocardial blood supply was caused by a spasm of a large coronary artery involving a long segment of the vessel, reversible by nitroglycerin administration. Aorto-coronary by-pass operation performed on 6 patients was followed by the disappearance of pain in two patients, even though the "by-pass" patency was angiographically proved in two patients.
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PMID:[Clinical coronarographic characteristics and pathogenetic mechanism of angina pectoris with s-t elevation (author's transl)]. 108 26

This study investigated the influence of defibrillator shocks delivered directly over a coronary artery, independent of ventricular fibrillation, on cardiac hemodynamics. Thirty-six open chest, halothane anesthetized pigs were randomized to receive six shocks at one of 5.0, 7.5, or 10.0 joules (J). Shocks were delivered between two mesh electrodes (Medtronic TX-7) sutured onto the epicardium, one over the left anterior descending coronary artery and the second directly opposite on the posterobasal ventricular surface. Shock delivery was synchronized to the R wave of the cardiac cycle, to reduce the risk of inducing fibrillation, with a 5-minute stabilization period between successive shocks. Pressure from the left ventricle, the left anterior descending coronary artery, distal to the mesh electrode and the left circumflex (control) artery and contractility in the regions perfused by both arteries were measured. The shocks invariably produced an immediate (2-second postshock), but transient, depression in systolic pressure of the same magnitude for the left anterior descending coronary artery, circumflex artery and the left ventricle that recovered by 5-minute postshock. There was no dose dependent relationship to energy. Also there was no clear difference in myocardial wall motion between the area perfused by the left anterior descending coronary artery and that perfused by the circumflex artery. These results suggest that shocks up to 10 J delivered over an epicardial artery do not cause arterial spasm and do not compromise coronary artery blood flow.
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PMID:Effects of defibrillation shocks delivered directly over a major coronary artery. 127 39

In our department we have reviewed the use of ergonovine maleate as a provocative agent for inducing coronary spasm during coronary arteriography. From January 1978 to December 1991 the test has been performed in 116 patients. According to their symptoms, the patients were divided into 4 groups: (A) patients with exertional angina: 16 patients (13.8%), (B) patients with angina at rest: 64 patients (55.2%), (C) patients with atypical chest pain: 29 patients (25%), and (D) patients with previous myocardial infarct: 7 patients (6%). We have subdivided the patients with angina at rest, according to the electrocardiogram recorded during pain, into: (1) 16 patients with ST-segment elevation; (2) 14 patients with ST-segment depression or T wave inversion; (3) 5 patients with electrocardiogram unchanged during angina; (4) 29 patients with no electrocardiogram recorded during angina. In 67 patients (57.7%) the coronaries were normal, 17 patients (14.6%) had mild irregularities, 26 patients (22.4%) had non critical fixed obstructions (< or = 70%), and in 6 patients (3.5%) there were fixed coronary narrowings > or = 70%. The left ventricle was normal in 85 subjects (73.2%), hypo or akinetic in 31 (26.8%). After routine coronary angiography and ventriculography, ergonovine maleate, 0.05 up to 0.4 mg, was given intravenously. The ergonovine test was considered positive when a focal spasm narrowed a normal coronary artery, or one with a mild fixed obstruction (< or = 50%) to more than 70%, or when a 70% stenosis became occluded. The development of angina and/or electrocardiographic changes were not taken as a criteria of positivity. Thirteen tests (11.2%) were considered positive.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The use of ergonovine in the hemodynamics laboratory]. 129 54

In order to examine the possible role of coronary artery spasm in the pathogenesis of unstable angina, provocative testing for coronary spasm was performed in 43 patients with unstable angina who had 0- or 1-vessel disease. Coronary spasm was induced in 20 (65%) of 31 patients by hyperventilation testing (ST increases in 18, ST decreases in 2). Anginal attacks with either ST-segment elevation or ST-segment depression in patients without a significant organic stenosis were induced in 23 (55%) of 42 patients during treadmill exercise testing. Coronary artery spasm, showing severe (> or = 90%) vasoconstriction with angina and/or ischemic electrocardiographic ST-segment deviation, was also documented angiographically in 42 (98%) of 43 patients following intracoronary injection of acetylcholine. We conclude that dynamic coronary obstruction plays an important role in the genesis of attacks in patients with unstable angina who had 0- or 1-vessel organic coronary artery disease.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of unstable angina with 0- or 1-vessel disease. Important role of coronary artery spasm. 136 32


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