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Despite much recent research, there is still little systematic information about the phenomenology of panic attacks, and their possible causes remain obscure. We investigated panic attacks in the natural environment using an event sampling approach. Twenty-seven panic attack patients and 19 matched normal controls kept panic attack and self-exposure diaries for 6 days and wore an ambulatory heart rate/physical activity recorder for 3 days. Patients reported 175 attacks, generally of moderate severity. The most frequent symptoms were palpitations, dizziness/lightheadedness, dyspnea, nausea, sweating, and chest pain/discomfort. The results did not support the classification of panic attacks recently proposed by Sheehan and Sheehan, which requires three symptoms as a cutoff for panic attacks. Panic attacks classified by the patients as situational (i.e., occurring in feared situations) were more severe and occurred in situational contexts different from spontaneous attacks, but were otherwise phenomenologically similar. Heart rates did not change during spontaneous attacks and were only mildly elevated during situational attacks or during the 15 minutes preceding these attacks. These heart rate changes were interpretable as effects of anxiety, although physical activity showed a similar pattern of changes. Some normal control subjects reported on the panic diary primarily situational anxiety episodes that were phenomenologically similar to, albeit less severe than, the patients' episodes. Panic patients may sometimes fail to perceive environmental triggers for their attacks because many attacks classified as spontaneous occurred in classical "phobic" situations. Furthermore, the comparison of concurrent diary and retrospective interview and questionnaire descriptions showed that panic patients have a tendency toward retrospective exaggeration. Implications for the assessment, definition, and classification of panic attacks are discussed.
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PMID:Panic attacks in the natural environment. 365 82

A within patient double blind prospective study of symptoms and exercise tolerance was designed to determine the preferred pacing mode in 10 patients with programmable dual chamber pacemakers who also had angina pectoris. Patients were randomly allocated to one month in each of the following modes: ventricular pacing at 70 beats/min (VVI) or atrioventricular synchronous upper rate 150 beats/min (DDD 150) or 100 beats/min (DDD 100). Medications were unchanged throughout the study; none was taking beta blockers. At the end of each month patients underwent an exercise test. During each month patients recorded symptoms and their preferred pacing mode. DDD 100 was the preferred mode (seven patients). There was significantly less chest pain with this mode than with either of the other modes. There were significantly more episodes of dizziness in VVI, and two patients who developed pacemaker syndrome were unable to complete the pacing period. Three patients developed angina during exercise testing in DDD 150. Atrial synchronous ventricular pacing is better than ventricular pacing for the control of symptoms in patients with angina pectoris provided that the upper atrial tracking rate is limited.
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PMID:Optimum pacing mode for patients with angina pectoris. 379 Mar 82

Cardiac and noncardiac side effects were studied in 293 consecutive patients referred for nonexercise stress thallium imaging with intravenous dipyridamole. Six minutes after the initiation of infusion, there was a mean 9-beat/min increase in heart rate and a mean 12-mm Hg decrease in systolic blood pressure. The largest increase in heart rate exceeded 20 beats/min in only 13% of patients and the largest decrease in systolic blood pressure exceeded 20 mm Hg in 31%. Noncardiac side effects were headache (11%), lightheadedness or dizziness (5%) and nausea (4%). Only 9 patients required intravenous aminophylline for relief of noncardiac side effects: severe headache in 7 and nausea in 2. Cardiac side effects included chest pain in 76 patients (26%), of whom 70% were given aminophylline for relief of symptoms. Sixty patients (20%) had ischemic ST-segment depression and 56 (19%) had arrhythmias (ventricular in 50 and atrial in 6). There were no deaths, myocardial infarctions or sustained arrhythmias due to dipyridamole administration. Among 62 patients also undergoing cardiac catheterization, side effects except for arrhythmias were unrelated to the number of vessels with coronary artery disease. Intravenous dipyridamole is safe for nonexercise stress testing and has few serious side effects. However, the possibility of ischemia requires careful selection of patients and monitoring of vital signs and the electrocardiogram during the test.
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PMID:Safety of intravenous dipyridamole for stress testing with thallium imaging. 381 27

Detection of coronary artery disease (CAD) in patients with aortic valve stenosis (AS) is clinically difficult. Thallium-201 images were generated in 27 patients with AS during combined intravenous dipyridamole and handgrip test, which induces a marked acute increase in coronary blood flow. Isolated AS was noted in 21 patients and combined AS and aortic regurgitation in 6. Thirteen patients had more than 50% diameter stenosis in 1 or more coronary arteries on angiography. Eleven of them had reversible perfusion defects on post-stress thallium scans (sensitivity 85%). Two patients had thallium defects without angiographic evidence of significant CAD (specificity 86%). In the other 12 patients with normal coronary angiographic findings, the thallium scans were normal. Two patients had dizziness and hypotension after dipyridamole infusion, which disappeared during the handgrip test; 2 others had chest pain during handgrip. One of them was treated with aminophylline and the other with aminophylline and nitroglycerin. No other adverse effects were reported by the patients and no major complications occurred during stress testing. Thus, thallium imaging during combined intravenous dipyridamole and handgrip test appears to be a promising noninvasive method of revealing CAD in patients with AS.
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PMID:Detection of coronary artery disease by thallium imaging using a combined intravenous dipyridamole and isometric handgrip test in patients with aortic valve stenosis. 381 85

A syndrome of headache, fatigue, dizziness, paresthesias, chest pain, palpitations and visual disturbances was associated with chronic occult carbon monoxide exposure in 26 patients in a primary care setting. A causal association was supported by finding a source of carbon monoxide in a patient's home, workplace or vehicle; results of screening tests that ruled out other illnesses; an abnormally high carboxyhemoglobin level in 11 of 14 patients tested, and abatement or resolution of symptoms when the source of carbon monoxide was removed. Exposed household pets provided an important clue to the diagnosis in some cases. Recurrent occult carbon monoxide poisoning may be a frequently overlooked cause of persistent or recurrent headache, fatigue, dizziness, paresthesias, abdominal pain, diarrhea and unusual spells.
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PMID:Occult carbon monoxide poisoning. 382 10

To clarify the clinical significance of a small heart; i.e., a small cardiac silhouette on chest radiography, an echocardiographic study was performed. Sixty persons with small heart according to cardiothoracic ratios less than or equal to 40%, and 23 age- and sex-matched normal controls (42% less than cardiothoracic ratio less than or equal to 50%) received two-dimensional and M-mode echocardiography. The body weights and body surface areas (BSA) in the small heart group were significantly less than those in the control group. On the lateral chest radiographs, numerous cases with small heart had straight spines and chests with decreased anteroposterior diameters. More than half of the small heart group had a variety of cardiovascular complaints, including chest pain, palpitation, dyspnea, and dizziness. Echocardiographic measurements were performed and hemodynamic indices were calculated. The results were as follows: Left ventricular dimension at end-diastole (LVDd), left ventricular dimension at end-systole (LVDs), left atrial dimension (LAD), and left ventricular mass (LV mass) of the small heart group were significantly less than those of the control group. There were, however, no differences in the values corrected by BSA (LVDd/BSA, LVDs/BSA, LAD/BSA and LV mass/BSA) between the two groups. We found no differences in hemodynamic indices (heart rate, stroke volume, ejection fraction, and cardiac output) at rest between the small heart and control groups. Nineteen cases (32%) had mitral valve prolapse (MVP) on echocardiography in the small heart group. Characteristic phonocardiographic findings were found in 11 cases with MVP (systolic click in four, mitral regurgitant murmur in three, and both in four).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Echocardiographic features of small heart]. 383 72

Voluntary sequential ambulatory electrocardiographic is a new electrocardiographic diagnostic method. The recorder weighs 300 g and measures 156 X 95,5 X 19 mm. The electrodes, which are an integral part of the device, record the cardiac potentials from the hands and chest wall for a programmed interval of 40 or 20 seconds which can be repeated four or eight times. The recordings are in a solid memory and restituted on an electrocardiograph directly using a cable or by telephonic transmission. The bandpass ranges from 50 Hz to 0.05 Hz (analysis of the ST segment). Our experience after several hundreds of recordings shows: - that the recordings obtained are of good quality and perfectly interpretable (even the ST segment) when the patient cooperates satisfactorily; - that the "diagnostic return" is high because the patient only records when he experiences symptoms (the small size of the recorder enables the patient to wear it continuously for periods of several days); - that the need for the patient to play an active role always requires detailed instructions, a condition which sometimes limits the use of this technique (very old or very young patients). These results indicate that voluntary sequential ambulatory electrocardiography is a very promising technique for diagnosing some paroxysmal symptoms (palpitations, episodes of dizziness, chest pain). It does not supplant continuous electrocardiographic recording (Holter method), a more exacting and costly technique, but could significantly reduce its indications.
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PMID:[A new electrocardiographic technic: voluntary, sequential ambulatory recording]. 392 Sep 98

A case of coronary artery vasospasm was studied in a man with a four year history of angina. He had evidence of symptomatic hyperventilation during a spontaneous episode of chest pain. When asked to hyperventilate the pain in his chest and ST elevation were reproduced in the same leads as occurred during the spontaneous attack. This may be the first reported case of spontaneous hyperventilation producing vasoconstriction, and the patient's previous admissions to the coronary care unit may have been associated with coronary vasospasm induced by hyperventilation. When patients with variant angina report pains in the chest in association with dizziness and breathlessness hyperventilation should be considered to be a possible cause of the symptoms. As coronary vasospasm is increasingly implicated in angina after myocardial infarction the role of hyperventilation should be considered more often.
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PMID:Are coronary artery spasm and progressive damage to the heart associated with the hyperventilation syndrome? 393 41

A hypertensive urgency should be distinguished from a hypertensive emergency. Although the distinction may not always be obvious, certain guidelines may help the clinician determine which therapeutic approaches are most appropriate for each patient. Hypertensive emergencies include those conditions in which new or progressive severe end-organ damage is present and a delay in appropriate therapy might result in permanent damage, progression of complications, and a poor prognosis. Hypertensive urgencies include those conditions with minimal to no obvious end-organ damage in which blood pressure should be lowered expeditiously. The risk of immediate complications or organ damage is less likely to occur, and thus the immediate prognosis is better, although the ultimate prognosis, if untreated, is poor. There is a marked individual, racial, sexual, and age difference in the ability to tolerate high intraarterial pressure, as evidenced by patients' symptoms and signs of end-organ damage. Patients may have no symptoms of elevated blood pressure until significant intraarterial levels are reached. If symptoms are present, they may include headache, dizziness, blurred vision, shortness of breath (especially with exertion), chest pain, rapid pulse, palpitations, malaise and fatigue, nocturia, or pedal edema. Signs of hypertensive disease vary and depend not only on the level of blood pressure but also include funduscopic changes with arteriolar narrowing, atrioventricular nicking, hemorrhages, exudates or papilledema, central nervous system changes and neurologic abnormalities, cardiac changes with gallop rhythm, cardiomegaly, tachycardia, ectopic ventricular beats, left ventricular hypertrophy or signs of congestive heart failure, pulmonary edema, and signs of renal insufficiency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hypertensive emergencies and urgencies: pathophysiology and clinical aspects. 394 53

Adolescent patients commonly experience symptoms such as headache, chest pain, abdominal pain, or dizziness that are psychophysiologic responses to stress, anxiety, and depression. Because most symptomatic adolescents initially visit medical providers, and not mental health professionals, the clinician is faced with the challenge of providing a comprehensive evaluation that is not merely focused on the symptom. In addition to a careful medical assessment, this evaluation must include a review of psychosocial functioning in the family, school, peer group, and community. Appropriate management may include supportive counseling, instruction in relaxation techniques, anti-depressant medication, and referral for psychotherapy.
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PMID:Evaluation and management of psychosomatic symptoms in adolescence. 394 55


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