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 short term reproducibility of exercise testing in 25 patients who had exercise induced ST segment elevation without baseline regional asynergy or a previous myocardial infarction, who had different responses to the dipyridamole test, was assessed. The patients performed a dipyridamole echocardiography test and a second exercise stress test. All underwent coronary arteriography. Seventeen patients had transient regional asynergy after dipyridamole (group 1) and either ST segment elevation (14 patients) or depression (three patients); a second group of eight had no asynergy and no electrocardiographic changes (group 2). The repeated exercise stress test was positive in 16 of the 17 patients of group 1 (11 with ST elevation and five with ST depression) and in two patients of group 2 (both had ST depression and one had coronary artery disease). The dipyridamole echocardiography test was positive in 17 of the 19 patients with coronary artery disease and was negative in all six patients without coronary artery disease. The repeated exercise stress test was positive in 17 of the 19 patients with coronary artery disease and in one patient without. The dipyridamole echocardiography test and a repeated exercise stress test, but not a single exercise stress test, identified coronary artery disease causing exercise induced ST segment elevation.
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PMID:Short term reproducibility of exercise testing in patients with ST segment elevation and different responses to the dipyridamole test. 319 Sep 56

This study assesses whether the high-dose dipyridamole-echocardiography test (DET, 2-D echocardiographic and 12-lead electrocardiographic monitoring during dipyridamole infusion, up to 0.84 mg/kg over 10 minutes) can help to identify patients with syndrome X. DET was performed in 10 control subjects (group A) and in 19 patients with syndrome X (group B). Patients in group B had chest pain on effort, a positive exercise stress response (more than 0.1 mV of ST-segment depression), negative ergonovine test response and normal left ventricular function and coronary angiographic findings. During DET no subject in group A showed transient asynergy or ST-segment depression and none had chest pain; in group B, no patient had transient asynergy, 13 (68%) had chest pain and 16 (84%) had more than 0.1 mV of ST-segment depression. Percent fractional shortening was not significantly different in the 2 study groups, either basally (group A, 35 +/- 7; group B, 37 +/- 8) or at peak hyperkinesia during DET (group A, 48 +/- 8; group B, 54 +/- 10). Thus, dipyridamole-induced chest pain and ST-segment depression in patients with syndrome X are not associated with impaired regional or global left ventricular function. This entity of echocardiographically silent myocardial ischemia during DET may be a clue to noninvasive detection of syndrome X.
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PMID:Usefulness of a high-dose dipyridamole-echocardiography test for diagnosis of syndrome X. 363 Sep 33

To investigate the clinical significance of exercise-induced ST segment elevation and ST segment depression after myocardial infarction (MI), we performed 87-lead ECG mapping after previous anterior infarction in 24 patients with isolated left anterior descending coronary artery disease before and 1.5 minutes after treadmill exercise. Thirteen patients showed ST segment elevation only, seven patients showed both ST segment elevation and depression, and four patients showed ST segment depression only. ST segment elevation most frequently occurred in the left anterior chest leads corresponding to the QS area, and ST segment depression developed in the left lower chest and left lower back leads. There was good correlation between the number of lead points showing ST segment elevation (nSTe) after exercise and the number of lead points showing QS waves (nQS) before exercise (r = 0.65). nSTe was also correlated with the asynergy index (r = 0.43). These findings suggest that ST segment elevation is mainly the result of aggravation of wall motion abnormalities of the infarcted myocardium. Body surface distribution of ST segment depression was similar to that in effort angina pectoris without MI. We conclude that exercise-induced ST segment depression in MI mainly reflects the ischemia of the surviving myocardium of small infarcts or the peripheral area of large infarcts.
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PMID:ST segment changes in exercise body surface mapping after myocardial infarction in patients with isolated left anterior descending coronary artery disease. 367 78

The feasibility, safety and usefulness of 2-dimensional echocardiography (2-D echo) during dobutamine infusion for identifying patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (CAD) after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) were evaluated in 30 patients 5 to 10 days after AMI. Patients underwent 2-D echo under basal conditions and during dobutamine infusion at each dose from 5 to a maximum of 40 micrograms/kg/min, limited multilead submaximal bicycle exercise testing and coronary and left ventricular angiography. Echocardiograms were analyzed independently by 2 observers. The test response was considered positive if abnormal wall motion and reduced myocardial thickening were observed during dobutamine infusion in vascular distributions other than the area of infarction identified during basal conditions. Exercise testing was considered positive when more than 1 mm of ST depression occurred 80 ms after the J point. Dobutamine stress testing was well tolerated; no complications and no significant arrhythmia were observed. Echocardiographic recordings were adequate in all patients during the entire test; the concordance in interpretation between the 2 observers was perfect for the prediction and location of ischemic segments during dobutamine infusion. In 15 of 17 patients without multivessel CAD, no asynergy was observed outside the infarct zone during dobutamine infusion (specificity 88%). In 11 of 13 patients with multivessel CAD, new wall motion abnormalities were identified in the segments corresponding to the arterial lesions diagnosed by angiography (sensitivity 85%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Predicting the extent and location of coronary artery disease in acute myocardial infarction by echocardiography during dobutamine infusion. 378 3

Fourteen consecutive patients with exercise-induced ST-segment elevation in the absence of previous infarction and basal left ventricular asynergy at rest performed a dipyridamole test (infusion of dipyridamole, 0.14 mg/kg/min intravenously for 4 minutes) during 12-lead electrocardiographic (ECG) and 2-dimensional echocardiographic monitoring. In 7 of the 14 patients, dipyridamole infusion consistently induced ST-segment elevation in the leads that showed ST elevation on effort; reversible asynergy (occurring in the region corresponding to the ECG leads with diagnostic changes) could always be documented by echocardiography. In 2 patients dipyridamole induced reversible asynergy in presence of ST-segment depression. In these 9 patients angiography invariably revealed a severe organic stenosis in the coronary artery feeding the region that became transiently asynergic after dipyridamole. In the other 5 patients (all of whom had either spontaneous or ergonovine-induced ST-segment elevation), the dipyridamole test yielded no significant echocardiographic or ECG change; coronary angiography showed absent (2 patients) or significant (3 patients) coronary artery disease. In conclusion, dipyridamole may induce transmural ischemia in humans, as detected by the electrical hallmark of ST elevation; this ECG pattern, in contrast to ST depression, reliably predicts the presence and site of transient regional asynergy. When dipyridamole induces ST-segment elevation, severe basal stenosis is invariably present in the coronary artery supplying the transiently asynergic myocardial region.
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PMID:Dipyridamole-echocardiography test in patients with exercise-induced ST-segment elevation. 396 63

In order to verify the usefulness of long-term digitalis therapy during physical rehabilitation in patients with recent myocardial infarction (MI) and left ventricular disfunction during exercise, 24 consecutive pts with PAedP greater than or equal to 25 mmHg (Swan-Ganz cath.) at maximal work load were selected. Pts with angina, ST depression (greater than or equal to 2 mm), complex ventricular arrhythmias (Lown 4-5), symptoms of left ventricular failure were excluded. At random 12 pts were assigned to group A (digoxin therapy) and 12 to group B (no therapy). Serum digoxin level was on average 1.48 ng/ml (range 1-2.85 ng/ml). Both groups performed over 4 weeks the same controlled training program. Before and soon after the end of the training period all pts underwent to an exercise test, standard chest x-ray films, 24 hour ambulatory ECG and two-dimensional echocardiography. No complication was observed during exercise test and training period. Age, myocardial infarction location, cardiac volume and hemodynamic behaviour during the first exercise test were similar in both groups. After training, maximal work capacity was increased in group A by 14% and in group B by 16% without significant changes in PAedP and Cl; at the same work load PAedP was lower in group B (-12%, p less than .02) while LVSWI was increased in both groups (14% and 17% respectively, p less than .05). No significant changes in cardiac volume, left ventricular asynergy, EF, and ventricular premature beats were observed. QT interval at rest decreased significantly only in group A 408 +/- 31 msec vs 371 +/- 34 msec (p less than .01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Recent myocardial infarction: role of digitalis therapy in patients with left ventricular dysfunction during exercise who participated in a short-term physical training program]. 400 49

This study assesses the clinical feasibility and usefulness of dipyridamole infusion for the detection of coronary artery disease (CAD) by using 2-dimensional echocardiography (2-D echo) and 12-lead electrocardiographic monitoring. Dipyridamole infusion (0.14 mg/kg/min for 4 minutes) was performed in 66 consecutive patients with effort chest pain and in 9 control subjects. Among the 28 patients with positive dipyridamole-echocardiography test responses, 18 had diagnostic electrocardiographic changes (ST-segment depression on anterolateral leads), but these changes were unrelated to the site of asynergy. The dipyridamole-echocardiography test had an overall sensitivity of 56% and specificity of 100% for the presence of CAD. Exercise stress testing (EST) had an overall sensitivity of 62% and a specificity of 80%. Thus, the dipyridamole-echocardiography test, which is feasible in essentially all patients with good basal echocardiograms, has a lower overall sensitivity in detecting CAD than EST but a higher specificity, detects the site of apparent ischemia as identified by regional asynergy more precisely than EST, and can unmask electrocardiographically silent effort ischemia.
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PMID:Dipyridamole-echocardiography test in effort angina pectoris. 403 26

Left ventricular (LV) diastolic properties in dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), transmural myocardial infarction (TMI), and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) were evaluated. Radionuclide angiography and M-mode echocardiography were performed for 11 cases of DCM, 40 cases of TMI, 21 cases of HCM, and nine normal control subjects. In DCM, the peak filling rate (PFR) and filling fraction (FF) were significantly reduced, but the time to the peak filling rate (TPFR) was not prolonged. In TMI, both the PFR and FF were significantly reduced. Moreover, the TPFR was significantly prolonged in TMI as compared to DCM. Although depression of the PFR in HCM was not apparent, prolongation of the TPFR in HCM was marked. In DCM, there was good correlation between the PFR and left ventricular ejection fraction (EF) (r = 0.71, p less than 0.03). In TMI, there was a good correlation between the TPFR and the standard deviation of the LV phase angle histogram (SDP), indicating LV asynergy (r = 0.589, p less than 0.005). In HCM, both the FF and PFR correlated inversely with the LV wall thickness (r = -0.74, p less than 0.008; r = -0.581, p less than 0.03, respectively). These results indicate that various factors affect LV diastolic properties in heart disease, and that radionuclide angiography is a valuable technique for evaluating LV diastolic function.
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PMID:[Left ventricular diastolic properties in dilated cardiomyopathy, transmural myocardial infarction, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy]. 406 40

The physical, metabolic and psychological advantages of cardiac rehabilitation and its effects on secondary prevention and mortality are discussed. The importance of functional assessment of the patient with postacute myocardial infarction (MI) is emphasized in order to define the prognostic and therapeutic approaches. The methods of assessment are described, ith particular regard to Echocardiography, ambulatory ECG and exercise test. The echocardiographic location and extension of left ventricular asynergy, which are often unpredictable with conventional ECG, have important functional implications. In our experience, on the basis of these data, subsets of patients with different degrees of left ventricular dysfunction, both at rest and during exercise, can be identified. The ambulatory ECG can reveal ventricular arrhythmias in 60% of infarcted patients, while during exercise test the incidence of ventricular premature beats (VPB) is 20%. Both in post-acute evaluations and in evaluations performed 1 year later, poor correlations were found between VPB and ECGraphic and hemodynamic parameters either at rest or during exercise; however during the first postinfarction year ventricular arrhythmias tend to decrease. Hemodynamic and ECGraphic patterns during exercise were analyzed in about 600 patients with recent MI: the left ventricular filling pressure (PWP) was greater than 20 mm Hg in 54% of the patients and greater than 30 mm Hg in 28%. The MI site is predictive of hemodynamic left ventricular dysfunction both at rest and during exercise: anterior MIs are more impaired than inferior MIs. Good correlations were found between the ST-segment elevation (increased ST) during exercise and left ventricular function; in particular, in anterior MI the ventricular function is generally normal in patients without increased ST, abnormal in those with increased ST (the increased ST increment during exercise, if present at rest, has no hemodynamic implications). In inferior MI the increased ST does not seem to have nay hemodynamic significance. The ST-segment depression (decreased ST) too, is of important functional significance: in anterior MI it is usually associated with increased ST and a more evident left ventricular dysfunction. In inferior MI, ventricular function is generally better in patients without decreased ST than in those with increased ST.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Rehabilitation of the worker with heart disease]. 648 72

Electrocardiographic ST-segment depression in the anterior precordial leads is a frequent observation during the initial hospital phase of acute transmural inferior myocardial infarction (MI), but is of uncertain significance. No available clinical studies have examined the prevalence of inferoseptal necrosis complicating inferior MI. Therefore, the clinical course, electrocardiographic features, radionuclide angiograms and cardiac enzyme changes in 57 patients with transmural inferior MI who did not have prior anterior or concomitant "true posterior" MI, associated anterior or posterolateral asynergy by radionuclide ventriculography, or left or right bundle branch block were reviewed retrospectively. Patients were categorized according to the presence (group A) or absence (group B) of precordial ST-segment depression and according to the presence (group I) or absence (group II) of radionuclide septal wall motion abnormalities. There were no significant differences in global left ventricular ejection fraction (group A, 49 +/- 8, group B, 52 +/- 41; group I, 51 +/- 7, group II, 51 +/- 6), right ventricular ejection fraction (group A, 45 +/- 9, group B, 42 +/- 7; group I, 43 +/- 8, group II, 41 +/- 8), or clinical outcome in the hospital. However, chi-square analysis revealed a significant (p less than 0.05) association between the presence or absence of septal asynergy and the presence or absence of precordial ST depression. In addition, average peak creatine kinase elevation (group I, 761 +/- 164 IU; group II, 698 +/- 178 IU) attained marginal significance by paired t test (p = 0.06). Precordial ST-segment depression during transmural inferior MI is frequently associated with septal asynergy by gated radionuclide angiography (15 of 26 patients, 58%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Inferoseptal myocardial infarction: another cause of precordial ST-segment depression in transmural inferior wall myocardial infarction? 650 93


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