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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To aid in the study of coronary artery disease, 57 patients with complete left bundle branch block underwent clinical evaluation, treadmill exercise testing and cardiac catheterization. The patients were classified into two groups according to coronary angiographic findings: 30 patients with significant stenosis (70 percent or greater luminal narrowing) of at least one major vessel and 27 with no significant coronary artery disease. There was no difference in age, presenting symptoms or previous medical treatment between the two groups. There were more men in the group with coronary artery disease. Exercise-induced S-T changes were similar in the two groups; the sensitivity and specificity of these changes for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease were unacceptable irrespective of the criterion chosen. With additional S-T
depression
of either 1 or 2 mm below the baseline value, the predictive accuracy was only 53 percent. Combined
exertional chest pain
and 1 mm S-T
depression
increased the predictive accuracy of exercise testing to 71 percent. These data indicate that exercise-induced electrocardiographic changes do not facilitate detection of coronary artery disease in patients with complete left bundle branch block.
...
PMID:Is the treadmill exercise test useful for evaluating coronary artery disease in patients with complete left bundle branch block? 67 34
A-50-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital for the examination of
exertional chest pain
. She had no coronary risk factors. No hormonal disorders were observed. Physical and laboratory examinations revealed that she had not suffered from syphilis or aortitis syndrome or any other inflammatory diseases. An exercise electrocardiogram (Master's test) demonstrated ST segment
depression
in V3-6, II, III and a VF. On coronary angiography, a 75% stenosis of the left coronary ostial stenosis was found, but no abnormality was found in other arterial trees. The patient was diagnosed as having isolated coronary ostial stenosis. She underwent coronary bypass surgery from the aorta to the circumflex artery and the anterior descending coronary artery. She is now completely asymptomatic. A review of the literature together with this patient reveals the following characteristics of patients with isolated coronary ostial stenosis. Firstly, the patients are almost always middle aged woman with no coronary risk factors. Secondly, the involved coronary artery is the left main coronary artery, so its obstruction results in a serious condition. Therefore, though its pathogenesis remains to be determined, isolated left coronary ostial stenosis seems to be a distinct clinical entity.
...
PMID:[A case of middle aged women with isolated left coronary ostial stenosis]. 143 94
Regional myocardial blood flow during exercise was determined using the thermodilution technique in 2 patients suffering from both spontaneous and
exertional chest pain
. In both cases we observed that effort-related anginal attacks were due to coronary spasm with sudden reduction of regional left ventricular blood flow. In 1 patient the exercise-induced ST-segment elevation in the anterior leads was accompanied by a reduction of flow in the great cardiac vein. In the second patient the exercise-induced ST-segment
depression
in the lateral leads was accompanied by a reduction of coronary flow in the area supplied by the circumflex artery. In 1 patient, nifedipine was effective in prolonging exercise tolerance by preventing the occurrence of coronary spasm and by increasing blood supply to the ischemic region during exercise.
...
PMID:Exercise-induced coronary artery spasm. A regional coronary blood flow study. 383 6
Three patients complained of spontaneous and
exertional chest pain
, both associated with S-T segment
depression
in anterior electrocardiographic leads. In each, coronary spasm was demonstrated on coronary arteriography during a spontaneous attack of pain. Coronary arteriograms taken during exercise-induced angina did not show evidence of spastic obstruction; this suggests that exercise-induced chest pain and S-T segment
depression
were secondary to the increase in oxygen requirements rather than to a sudden decrease in coronary blood flow. Thus, two pathogenetic mechanisms coexisting in the same patient may cause chest pain associated with subendocardial ischemia.
...
PMID:Angiographic demonstration of different pathogenetic mechanisms in patients with spontaneous and exertional angina associated with S-T segment depression. 737 26
A 49-year-old man with a history of traumatic left above-elbow amputation was hospitalized for surgical management of a phantom pain syndrome. Evaluation revealed a history of
exertional chest pain
radiating into the phantom limb. Exercise testing reproduced the pain symptoms and demonstrated electrocardiographic ischemic S-T segment
depression
. Coronary angiography revealed severe three-vessel coronary artery disease. The patient underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery which eliminated the anginal component of his phantom pain syndrome and abolished evidence of exercise-induced myocardial ischemia. This case illustrates that myocardial ischemia can produce phantom pain with the characteristics of typical angina and indicates the need for thorough evaluation of patients presenting with unusual features of phantom pain.
...
PMID:Phantom angina. 816 67
Variance electrocardiography (variance ECG) is a new resting procedure for detection of coronary artery disease (CAD). The method measures variability in the electrical expression of the depolarization phase induced by this disease. The time-domain analysis is performed on 220 cardiac cycles using high-fidelity ECG signals from 24 leads, and the phase-locked temporal electrical heterogeneity is expressed as a nondimensional CAD index (CAD-I) with the values of 0-150. This study compares the diagnostic efficiency of variance ECG and exercise stress test in a high prevalence population. A total of 199 symptomatic patients evaluated with coronary angiography was subjected to variance ECG and exercise test on a bicycle ergometer as a continuous ramp. The discriminant accuracy of the two methods was assessed employing the receiver operating characteristic curves constructed by successive consideration of several CAD-I cutpoint values and various threshold criteria based on ST-segment
depression
exclusively or in combination with
exertional chest pain
. Of these patients, 175 with CAD (> or = 50% luminal stenosis in 1 + major epicardial arteries) presented a mean CAD-I of 88 +/- 22, compared with 70 +/- 21 in 24 nonaffected patients (p < 0.01). Variance ECG provided a stochastically significant discrimination (p < 0.01) which was matched by exercise test only when chest pain variable was added to ST-segment
depression
as a discriminating criterion. Even then, the exercise test diagnosed single-vessel disease with a significantly lower sensitivity. At a cutpoint of CAD-I > or = 70, compared with ST-segment
depression
> or = 1 mm combined with
exertional chest pain
, the overall sensitivity of variance ECG was significantly higher (p < 0.01) than that of exercise test (79 vs. 48%). When combined, the two methods identified 93% of coronary angiography positive cases. Variance ECG is an efficient diagnostic method which compares favorably with exercise test for detection of CAD in high prevalence population.
...
PMID:Electrocardiogram signal variance analysis in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease--a comparison with exercise stress test in an angiographically documented high prevalence population. 824 12
Coronary ostial stenosis with otherwise normal coronary vessels occurs in patients with syphilis or Takayasu's aortitis. Iatrogenic ostial stenosis may develop as a complication of coronary angiography or after coronary perfusion at the time of cardiac surgery. Isolated ostial stenosis in the absence of these factors has been reported infrequently and its unique clinical and angiographic profile has been noted recently. Hence, it is proposed that this type of isolated ostial stenosis may represent a clinical entity distinct from the usual atherosclerotic coronary disease. We report the case of a middle-aged woman with this type of isolated coronary ostial stenosis. A 55-year-old female was admitted with the complaint of
exertional chest pain
, which had appeared 2 months admission and which had gradually become more frequent. The ECG on admission was normal. She had no coronary risk factor. Treadmill exercise test was stopped at stage 2 of Bruce protocol because ischemic S-T segment
depression
appeared in II, III, aVF, V4-V6 and she complained of a chest pain. Coronary angiography showed a 90% stenosis of the left coronary ostium with normal distal vessels. The right coronary artery was normal. A coronary artery bypass graft to the left anterior descending branch was performed uneventfully and the patient remains asymptomatic.
...
PMID:[A case of isolated coronary ostial stenosis in a middle-aged woman]. 833 37
To evaluate the relationship between angina pectoris caused by dynamic exercise and the time course of heart rate (HR) and hemodynamics during dynamic exercise in 15 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) with normal epicardial coronary arteries, the supine ergometer exercise test was performed during cardiac catheterization. The HCM patients were divided into a chest pain group (n = 6) and a no chest pain group (n = 9) based upon the results of the ergometer exercise test. There was no significant difference in the level of ST-segment
depression
after exercise in both the chest pain and no chest pain groups (-2.1 +/- 0.6 mm vs -2.6 +/- 1.1 mm, NS). Increase in heart rate (HR) and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) in the early phase of the exercise test was significantly greater in the chest pain group compared with the no chest pain group. These observations suggest that in HCM patients, the occurrence of
exertional chest pain
has a close relationship with the rapid increase in HR and LVEDP in the early phase of dynamic exercise, but does not have a relationship with the gradual increase in these parameters.
...
PMID:Angina pectoris caused by dynamic exercise in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with normal coronary arteries. 851 71
Patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy frequently complain of chest pain during daily activities. ST-segment
depression
is described in association with sudden death and pacing, but its prevalence during ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring is unknown. The aim of this study was to determine the relation of ambulatory ST-segment
depression
to clinical characteristics, risk factors for sudden death and thallium-201 perfusion in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Continuous 48 h ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring was performed in 113 patients (age 38 +/- 14 years) with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Ninety-four (83%) recordings were suitable for ST-segment analysis. A total of 109 episodes of ST-segment
depression
(> or = 1 mm from baseline) were recorded in 25 (27%) patients (mean 4 +/- 5). In patients < or = 30 years of age (but not > 30) there was an association between ST-segment
depression
and a history of
exertional chest pain
(seven of 12 vs one of 20; P = 0.001), and dyspnoea NYHA class II/III (seven of 15 vs one of 17; P = 0.008). There was no association between ST-segment
depression
and risk markers for sudden death, i.e. family history of sudden death, syncope and non-sustained ventricular tachycardia, in any group. Reversible thallium-201 defects occurred in 27 (29%) of the 94 patients with analysed recordings but were not associated with symptoms, risk factors for sudden death or ambulatory ST-segment
depression
. In young patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, ischaemia-like ST-segment
depression
is common and is associated with a history of typical angina and dyspnoea. Reversible thallium-201 perfusion defects are associated with neither symptomatic status nor ambulatory ST-segment
depression
.
...
PMID:Chest pain during daily life in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: an ambulatory electrocardiographic study. 880 11
A 71-year-old man with
exertional chest pain
was admitted to the hospital. A chest roentgenogram exhibited levoposition of the heart. An electrocardiogram showed clockwise rotation in the precordial leads and ST
depression
in V6, V7, V8, and V9 as well as in II, III, aVF leads associated with chest pain in a treadmill exercise test. The congenital complete left-sided pericardial defect could not be diagnosed preoperatively, but it was confirmed by thoracotomy.
...
PMID:Cardiac displacement with a congenital complete left-sided pericardial defect in a patient with exertional angina pectoris--a case report. 1525 91
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