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)

The mechanisms of spontaneous angina were evaluated during cardiac catheterization in 13 patients who had angina occurring without provocation at rest. Left ventricular and systemic hemodynamics, coronary venous flows (thermodilution technique), electrocardiogram and coronary angiograms were recorded before and during spontaneous angina. Angiography during spontaneous angina showed that 5 patients had coronary spasm (group I) and 8 patients did not (group II). In group II there was a preponderance of multivessel coronary artery disease. Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure increased in all patients in both groups during spontaneous angina. In group I, 4 patients had transient ST elevation and 1 patient had peaked T waves during angina. Transient ST depression occurred during spontaneous angina in all group II patients. Group I patients had decreased coronary sinus flow (4 of 5 patients) or decreased regional flow (5 of 5) during spontaneous angina. Coronary resistance and ratio of double product to coronary blood flow increased in all patients. In group II, coronary hemodynamic responses during spontaneous angina varied. Coronary venous flows, coronary resistance and ratio of double product to coronary blood flow showed no uniform pattern. Thus, patients with severe coronary artery disease can have spontaneous angina without angiographic findings of coronary spasm. After analysis of angiograms and coronary hemodynamics in these patients, no apparent uniform mechanism for spontaneous angina was found.
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PMID:Coronary hemodynamic responses during spontaneous angina in patients with and patients without coronary artery spasm. 401 38

The histology of coronary arteries was compared in patients with rest and effort angina. The arteries came from six patients with three vessel disease who died within four weeks of arteriography and ambulatory ST segment monitoring. Sections of all macroscopically visible arteries were taken every 5 mm and examined histologically. Episodes of ST segment depression had occurred on exertion in two patients, during exertion and rest (nocturnal) in two, and two patients had had no episodes of ST segment depression during ambulatory monitoring. Concentric (29%) or eccentric (62%) intimal thickening due to atheroma or fibroelastic tissue was found in 91% of sections. All but two normal intimal sections (1%) were found to be diseased in patients with ambulatory ST segment changes. Eccentric lesions with medial smooth muscle preservation in areas without intimal thickening, where further luminal narrowing could occur due to increases in smooth muscle tone, were found in 15% of sections. But these areas were not found in the proximal 3.5 cm of any of the major coronary arteries of the two patients with rest and effort ischaemia. Spasm could not have caused total occlusion in any of these arteries because the lumen was splinted by the lesion. There was no difference in mean luminal narrowing between patients with exertional and rest ischaemia and exertional ischaemia only (mean 74%), but mean luminal narrowing was lower in patients with no ambulatory episodes of ST segment change (39%). Thus medial smooth muscle spasm was unlikely to have caused occlusion in patients with ambulatory ST segment changes, although it could have altered lumen diameter. There are no histological differences in the coronary arteries of patients with rest or effort induced myocardial ischaemia.
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PMID:Coronary anatomy in patients with various manifestations of three vessel coronary artery disease. 405 77

Incubates of morphine with serum globulins obtained from sera of rabbits immunized with a morphine-bovine serum albumin conjugate produced immediate Schultz-Dale contractions when added to superfused, electrically stimulated guinea-pig ileal strips. Incubates of morphine with Krebs-Henseleit solution produced relaxation and depression of tone, and inhibition of electrically induced contractions. It is concluded that the spasm of guinea-pig ileum produced by incubates containing morphine-binding serum globulins and morphine resulted from transient passive sensitization and an acute anaphylactic type of response.
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PMID:Effects of a morphine-rabbit anti-morphine antibody mixture on guinea-pig isolated ileum. 478 45

Changes in heart rate before and throughout episodes of ST-segment depression were recorded during ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring in five patients with daytime and nocturnal resting angina and six patients with daytime angina only, who all had severe obstructive coronary disease. In 16 of 17 nocturnal episodes and in all the daytime episodes the heart rate increased before the onset of ST-segment depression. There were no significant differences in the sequence and magnitude of changes in daytime, nocturnal, painful, or painless episodes. The maximum heart rate during individual episodes preceded the maximum ST-segment depression by a mean 80.7 s and in the majority of episodes the heart rate returned to baseline before the ST segment. Thus, in severe coronary artery disease the mechanisms producing nocturnal resting ischaemia were apparently similar to those during daytime exertion; increased myocardial oxygen demand not coronary spasm seemed responsible for most of the episodes of nocturnal ischaemia.
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PMID:Mechanisms of nocturnal angina pectoris: importance of increased myocardial oxygen demand in patients with severe coronary artery disease. 614 24

In a retrospective study of 89 patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), the frequency and specificity of changes in the electrocardiogram (ECG) were determined, as well as electrocardiographically established arrhythmias. The ECG changes were correlated with neurological as well as angiographic findings (localization of the aneurysm and vascular spasm). Abnormal ECGs were found in about 80% of the patients. The following abnormalities were found with decreasing frequency: depression and elevation of the ST segment, prolongation of the QT interval, flattening and inversion of the T wave, U waves and TU fusion waves, and arrhythmias (sinus tachycardia and bradycardia, extrasystole). A verified correlation (chi-square test) was shown between angiographically demonstrated spasm of the brain arteries of the left side and negative T waves as well as a prolongation of the QT interval. These results are related to the causal role of the left stellate ganglion in the generation of ECG changes and arrhythmias (animal experiments, and the success by blockade or surgical removal of the stellate ganglion in hereditary QT prolongation.
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PMID:Electrocardiographic alterations in subarachnoid haemorrhage. Correlation between spasm of the arteries of the left side on the brain and T inversion and QT prolongation. 618 Jan 45

Because of recent findings, a reassessment is needed of the concept that rest angina associated with ST-segment depression is due to a spontaneous, transient increase of blood pressure or heart rate, or both, in the presence of critical coronary artery stenosis. Continuous hemodynamic and electrocardiographic recordings done before and during attacks of rest angina and thallium-201 scintigrams done during pain indicate that a transient reduction of flow is the immediate cause of ischemia in most, but not all, instances. Flow reduction, in turn, appears to be due to coronary arterial spasm or platelet aggregation, or both, acting at a site of atherosclerotic narrowing. Therapy for unstable rest angina should include measures to prevent both transient reductions of flow and increases of myocardial oxygen consumption. A combination of long-acting nitrates, a beta-blocker, a calcium-channel blocker, and aspirin or heparin is suggested for this purpose. Intravenous nitroglycerin is useful when angina occurs despite this therapy or when frequent attacks of ischemia are occurring at the time of admission.
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PMID:Unstable rest angina with ST-segment depression. Pathophysiologic considerations and therapeutic implications. 632 Jul 1

Effort angina is the result of acute myocardial ischemia on exercise due to an imbalance between myocardial oxygen demand and supply. During exercise, ischemia is provoked by an increase in myocardial oxygen needs (tachycardia, increased blood pressure, etc.) which cannot be met by increased coronary blood flow. The commonest cause of insufficient flow is coronary atherosclerosis. Coronary spasm does, however, play a role, whether it occurs during exercise on normal or atheromatous coronary vessels. Classical anti-anginal therapy is directed towards a reduction in the intense adrenergic activity associated with exercise, and to the limitation of myocardial oxygen consumption. Calcium inhibitors which cause peripheral vasodilation, decrease ventricular wall tension and coronary resistance, are usually reserved for unstable or resistant angina. We studied 10 patients with stable effort angina for over 2 years with significant (greater than 70 per cent) atheromatous lesions on coronary angiography unsuitable for surgical treatment. The patients underwent a randomised double blind trial to compare the effects of propranolol, diltiazem and placebo. Exercise ECG was performed after a treatment period of one week, 3 hours after drug administration. The results showed a significant improvement of work capacity with propranolol and diltiazem as compared to placebo. Propranolol (160 mg/day) was more effective than diltiazem (180 mg/day) in 6 patients. In 4 cases, the improvement with diltiazem and propranolol was the same. The association of the two drugs in one open study in 5 patients was even more effective in 3 patients. The small number of patients studied makes it impossible to draw any firm conclusions. Although calcium inhibitors are the treatment of choice in coronary spasm and betablockers in effort angina, diltiazem exerts an anti-anginal effect by reduction of myocardial oxygen consumption without depression of myocardial contractility, as other workers have shown.
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PMID:[Are calcium inhibitors useful in the treatment of effort angina pectoris]. 640 53

This study comprised 165 cases of coronary artery spasm (147 men and 18 women) with an average age of 49,2 years (range 27 to 73 years). Smoking was a particularly significant risk factor. Symptoms were usually of recent onset (80%) and dominated by attacks of angina pectoris either at rest alone or associated with angina of effort. 14% of cases of spasm were observed during acute myocardial infarction. Some cases presented with syncope due to cardiac arrhytmias. The basal electrocardiogramme was normal in 53% of cases. Exercise stress testing may be normal (30/65 cases) or positive (ST depression recorded in 26/65 cases). In 5 cases, ST elevation was observed. Left ventricular function was usually normal: 115 patients (70%) had organic atherosclerotic lesions, with 1, 2 and 3 vessel disease in 40%, 18% and 22% respectively. Spasm was spontaneous in 24,2% of cases but most commonly provoked by ergometrine. Criteria of spasm only applied to focal spasm and exclused catheter--induced spasm. The most common site of spasm was the right coronary artery (50,3% of cases), followed by the left anterior descending (31% of cases) and left circumflex (10,3% of cases). The outcome of these 165 cases depended on the therapeutic options (surgical treatment in 48 cases). The medium term results were generally good with a low mortality rate and follow up showed that the calcium antagonists provided effective prophylaxis against recurrence of spasm.
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PMID:[Coronary artery spasm. Apropos of 165 cases]. 641 13

Three cases of anginal pain with ST elevation occurring at the end of exercise are reported. In 2 cases, there was a symptom-free interval between exercise, which was well tolerated, and the clinical and electrical changes. The coronary circulation was angiographically normal, although one of the patients had have previous transmural myocardial infarction. Spontaneous coronary spasm was observed during coronary angiography in this patient. The third case was characterised by exclusively spontaneous angina. ST elevation was observed very early in the recovery phase after stress testing. This patient had severe triple vessel disease. Angiospastic manifestations were noted in the immediate postoperative period after myocardial revascularisation surgery. A review of the litterature shows two types of behaviour. In the rare cases of ST elevation after maximal stress testing (7 cases apart from those reported here) the coronary vessels were normal. On the other hand, when ST elevation occurred during exercise and/or followed ST depression, coronary artery disease was demonstrated: significant 52 cases (81%), less than 70%: 12 cases (19%). Overall, these results indicate that when ST elevation is observed in the recovery phase after stress testing, the coronary arteries are angiographically normal (specificity: 0,9).
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PMID:[Induction of Prinzmetal's angina by stopping exercise. Apropos of 3 cases]. 641 93

A 42 year old woman presented with resting and effort angina. During an attack of chest pain, ST-T wave depression was recorded in the anterior chest leads. Coronary angiography showed spontaneous spasm of the left main stem, relieved by nitrate derivatives. The coronary arteries were angiographically normal between attacks of angina. Thallium 201 myocardial scintigraphy showed anterior wall hypofixation at maximal effort. A good therapeutic result was obtained with calcium antagonists. The site of coronary spasm is the special feature of this case, which may be grouped with other rare reported cases of spontaneous spasm or spasm on effort. We confirm that spasm-induced myocardial ischaemia may cause ST depression on the surface ECG.
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PMID:[Rest and exercise angina caused by spasm of the left coronary artery. Apropos of a case with angiographically normal coronary arteries]. 643 63


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