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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient with
atypical chest pain
developed pre-excitation during exercise and isoproterenol infusion, with "ischemic" ST
depression
only during the pre-excited beats. Coronary angiography and myocardial lactate extraction showed no evidence of abnormal coronary vessels. Electrophysiologic study and pacing-induced tachycardia did not induce pre-excitation, whereas exercise induced progressive increase in pre-excitation. The data are consistent with an unusual form of pre-excitation, perhaps related to responsiveness of an accessory bypass tract to catecholamine stimulation. The data also show that the false positive exercise test in this syndrome is due to progressively increasing pre-excitation and therefore more abnormal repolarization.
...
PMID:Increasing pre-excitation during exercise and isoproterenol infusion. Evidence for a catecholamine sensitive bypass tract. 46 45
In 1,455 subjects (947 men and 508 women) who underwent a bicycle ergometer stress test for evaluation of
atypical chest pain
, the incidence of coronary events (definite myocardial infarction or sudden death) was assessed by the life table method. The follow-up period ranged from 3 to 7 years (mean 5.2 years). In men with positive exercise test (ischemic ST
depression
greater than or equal to 1 mm), the 5-year incidence of coronary events was 18.3%, compared with 1.9% in negative responders. In women with positive response, the 5-year incidence of coronary events was 4.6%; in negative responders, it was 0.3%. The poor predictive value of ischemic ST responses to exercise in women is emphasized.
...
PMID:Different prognostic value of exercise electrocardiogram in men and women. 67 24
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.
...
PMID:Exercise stress testing in patients with chest pain and normal coronary arteriography: with review of the literature. 122 21
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)
...
PMID:[Constriction of the left main coronary artery. Early and long term treatment outcome]. 129 44
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)
...
PMID:[The use of ergonovine in the hemodynamics laboratory]. 129 54
Exercise-induced bundle branch block is an uncommon electrocardiographic entity said to be associated with coronary heart disease. Thirty-seven patients were studied to determine if exercise hemodynamics and stress/rest thallium scans could identify those patients with coronary heart disease. Eighteen patients of the study group also had coronary angiography. Group I (n = 17) with normal thallium scans and group II (n = 20) with abnormal thallium scans had significantly different maximal heart rate, maximal blood pressure, and double product in exercise as well as duration of exercise. Clinical evaluation of the patient study group permitted a division of the patients into two subgroups: group A,
atypical chest pain
or abnormal exercise electrocardiogram (n = 12), and group B, definite or probable angina (n = 25). Group B patients had significantly more abnormal thallium scans (17/25) than group A patients (3/12) (p less than 0.04). When compared to coronary angiography, stress/rest thallium scans had a predictive accuracy of 85% for coronary heart disease. While exercise-induced ST-segment
depression
and R wave amplitude increases are not specific in exercise-induced bundle branch block, exercise hemodynamics and stress/rest thallium scans can help diagnose patients with coronary heart disease. These test findings added to a clinical evaluation permit a more accurate stratification of the patients and indicate which patients need further study.
...
PMID:The clinical significance of exercise-induced bundle branch block. 164 63
Exercise stress testing is routinely used for the noninvasive assessment of coronary artery disease and is considered a safe procedure. However, the provocation of severe ischemia might potentially cause delayed recovery of myocardial function. To investigate the possibility that maximal exercise testing could induce prolonged impairment of left ventricular function, 15 patients with angiographically proved coronary disease and 9 age-matched control subjects with
atypical chest pain
and normal coronary arteries were studied. Radionuclide ventriculography was performed at rest, at peak exercise, during recovery and 2 and 7 days after exercise. Ejection fraction, peak filling and peak emptying rates and left ventricular wall motion were analyzed. All control subjects had a normal exercise test at maximal work loads and improved left ventricular function on exercise. Patients developed 1 mm ST
depression
at 217 +/- 161 s at a work load of 70 +/- 30 W and a rate-pressure product of 18,530 +/- 4,465 mm Hg x beats/min. Although exercise was discontinued when angina or equivalent symptoms occurred, in all patients diagnostic ST
depression
(greater than or equal to 1 mm) developed much earlier than symptoms. Predictably, at peak exercise patients showed a decrease in ejection fraction and peak emptying and filling rates. Ejection fraction and peak emptying rate normalized within the recovery period, whereas peak filling rate remained depressed throughout recovery (p less than 0.002) and was still reduced 2 days after exercise (p less than 0.02). In conclusion, in patients with severe impairement of coronary flow reserve, maximal exercise may cause sustained impairement of diastolic function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Symptom-limited exercise testing causes sustained diastolic dysfunction in patients with coronary disease and low effort tolerance. 201 41
Clinical presentation and course were studied in 127 consecutive patients with angiographically proven left main coronary artery disease. Mean age was 62 (37-79) years. Thirteen patients (10%) had no history of chest pain, seven (5%) had
atypical chest pain
, and the remaining 107 (85%) typical angina pectoris. Eighty-two patients (65%) had unstable angina, 73 had suffered a myocardial infarction (MI) in the past, and 50 (68%) had post MI angina pectoris. The electrocardiogram was analysed in 102/125 patients during an episode of chest pain and also when they were without chest pain. Outside an episode of chest pain the ST segment was normal in 42 patients (32%), the T wave was normal in 50 patients (38%) and both the ST and T were normal in 33 patients (25%). During chest pain all patients had an abnormal ECG, the most frequent pattern being ST segment
depression
in leads V3, V4 and V5 (with maximal
depression
in V4), and ST segment elevation in leads V1 and aVR. The average number of leads with ST-T abnormalities was 6.4. A symptom-limited exercise test on a treadmill with 12-lead ECG monitoring was performed in 89 patients. The exercise test was abnormal in 88 patients (99%), most of whom (74 patients) were already in the first or second stage of the Bruce protocol. The most frequently observed abnormality was ST segment
depression
of 2 mm or more in leads V4, V5, and V6, and ST segment elevation in leads V1 and aVR. The systolic blood pressure during exercise fell or remained at the same level in 38 patients (43%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical presentation and prognosis of left main coronary artery disease in the 1980s. 206 83
To examine the contribution of psychopathology to emergency room (ER) visits for
atypical chest pain
, we administered two screening measures and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM III-R (SCID) to thirty-five subjects within seventy-two hours of their ER visit. Follow-up SCID interviews were completed in thirty subjects at five to twelve months. Sixty percent of the sample had an initial Axis I diagnosis, predominately affective (34%) and anxiety (46%) disorders. Forty percent had multiple diagnoses initially. The most common diagnoses were panic disorder (31%) and major depression (23%). At follow-up 47 percent had Axis I diagnoses, 30 percent had multiple diagnoses, with only slightly decreases rates for panic disorder (27%) and major depression (17%). Many subjects had lost, gained, or switched diagnoses by follow-up, in spite of one consistent rater and a few subjects seeking treatment. ER physicians often do not recognize these psychiatric disorders in chest pain patients. The high risk of suicide in panic disorder and
depression
, and the high cost of disability in recurrent chest pain make it essential that ER physicians include these disorders in the differential of
atypical chest pain
.
...
PMID:Axis I disorders in ER patients with atypical chest pain. 206 56
The utility of exercise echocardiography for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease has been demonstrated in populations consisting largely of men with a high prevalence of disease. To determine the diagnostic value of exercise echocardiography in women, 57 women who presented with chest pain were studied with coronary cineangiography and echocardiography combined with either treadmill (n = 38) or bicycle exercise (n = 19). Significant coronary artery disease (greater than or equal to 50% reduction in luminal diameter) was present in 28 (49%) of 57 patients, including 16 (84%) of 19 who had typical angina, and 12 (32%) of 38 who had
atypical chest pain
. The overall sensitivity and specificity of echocardiography were both 86%. Exercise echocardiography correctly determined the presence or absence of coronary artery disease in 32 (84%) of 38 patients who had
atypical chest pain
and in 17 (89%) of 19 who had typical angina (p = NS). The exercise electrocardiogram (ECG) was nondiagnostic in 17 patients (30%) who had rest ST segment
depression
or ST
depression
with exercise that could also be induced by hyperventilation or changes in position. The correct diagnosis was made by echocardiography in 14 (82%) of 17 patients with a nondiagnostic exercise ECG. In conclusion, exercise echocardiography has a clinically useful level of sensitivity and specificity for the detection of coronary artery disease in women. The technique provides diagnostic information in women presenting with
atypical chest pain
and in those who have a nondiagnostic exercise ECG.
...
PMID:Exercise echocardiographic detection of coronary artery disease in women. 280 1
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