Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Eleven autopsy cases (average of 71 years) with complete right bundle branch block were examined histologically with serial sectioning of the conduction system. The results were as follows: 1) moderate to severe reduction of conducting cells in the right bundle branch (RBB) by fibrous replacement in all 11 cases, 2) a preponderance of main lesions in the first portion of the RBB in cases with R configuration in leads V1 and V2, and in the second to the third portion without significant lesion of the Purkinje cell network in the right ventricle in cases with rsR', and RSR' configuration in these leads, 3) as to the etiology, 1 case was assumed to have had rheumatic myocarditis and an another case, 1 chronic ischemia. In cases in which the cause could not be clearly established, reduction of the conducting cells in the first portion of the RBB was thought to be due to fibrosis of the upper ventricular septum. Lesions in the second portion of the RBB may be due to mechanical strain effected by muscle crossing of the trabecula septomarginalis and RBB.
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PMID:Histopathological study on the conduction system of complete right bundle branch block with references to configuration of QRS complex. 52 45

The effect of lidocaine on His-Purkinje conduction in dogs with ischemic damage to the His bundle was compared with the effect of lidocaine in normal dogs. The anterior septal artery was ligated in 14 dogs, and 30 minutes later atrial pacing was performed to increase residual ischemic damage. Four to 6 days later, His bundle recordings were obtained during sinus rhythm and atrial pacing before and after the administration of lidocaine in a dose of 2 mg/kg and a total dose of 4 mg/kg. His bundle recordings were also obtained in nine control animals beofre and after the administration of lidocaine. Lidocaine significantly increased the H-V time in the animals with ischemic damage during sinus rhythm and at all packing rates. It also resulted in advanced His-Purkinje conduction defects including His bundle block and right bundle branch block in these animals. In contrast, the effect of lidocaine in the normal animals was negligible. It is concluded that lidocaine significantly depresses His-Purkinje conduction in the setting of preexisting ischemic damage. These results suggest that lidocaine may be used as a diagnostic tool to unmask latent His-Purkinje conduction defects due to ischemia.
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PMID:Effect of lidocaine on conduction in the ischemic His-Purkinje system of dogs. 69 42

Myocardial ischemia may decrease conduction velocity and produce QRS prolongation in the surface electrocardiogram. In cases with normal intraventricular conduction, areas of the myocardium contributing to the development of the S wave receive blood from all 3 major coronary arteries, whereas in left anterior hemiblock or right bundle branch block, most of the blood supply to the areas of the myocardium contributing to the development of the S wave is from the left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery. To test the hypothesis that the S wave will be prolonged with exercise only in patients with LAD coronary artery stenosis and left anterior hemiblock or right bundle branch block, 88 patients with normal intraventricular conduction, 66 with left anterior hemiblock and 36 with right bundle branch block were studied. Sixty-four, 32 and 21 patients had LAD, right and left circumflex coronary artery stenoses, respectively. In patients with normal coronary arteries, S-wave duration decreased with exercise regardless of the status of ventricular conduction. In patients with coronary artery disease and normal intraventricular conduction, the S wave was prolonged slightly with exercise, but in those with left anterior hemiblock and right bundle branch block, it was prolonged significantly (12.5 +/- 6 and 10.4 ms, respectively) only in those with LAD, but not in those with circumflex or right coronary artery stenosis. S-wave prolongation in patients with LAD coronary artery stenosis and left anterior hemiblock or right bundle branch block most likely is related to exercise-induced ischemia in the areas of the myocardium contributing to the development of the S wave.
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PMID:Exercise-induced S-wave prolongation in left anterior descending coronary artery stenosis. 144 9

We performed exercise thallium-201 myocardial scintigraphy in 32 patients with angina pectoris to study the incidence of perfusion defects, who had no significant organic stenosis on coronary angiography. None of them had myocardial infarction or cardiomyopathy. Thallium-201 myocardial scintigraphy and 12-lead ECG recording were performed during supine bicycle ergometer exercise. Perfusion defects in thallium-201 scintigrams in SPECT images were assessed during visual analysis by two observers. In the coronary angiograms obtained during intravenous infusion of nitroglycerin, the luminal diameter of 75% stenosis or less in the AHA classification was regarded as an insignificant organic stenosis. Myocardial perfusion defects in the thallium-201 scintigrams were detected in eight (25%) of the 32 patients. Six of these eight patients had variant angina documented during spontaneous attacks with ST elevations in standard 12-lead ECGs. Perfusion defects were demonstrated at the inferior or inferoposterior regions in six patients, one of whom had concomitant anteroseptal defect. The defects were not always accompanied by chest pain. All but one patient demonstrating inferior or inferoposterior defects showed ST depression in leads II, III and aVF on their ECGs, corresponding to inferior wall ischemia. The exception was a case with right bundle branch block. Thus, 25% of the patients with angina pectoris, who had no evidence of significant organic stenosis on their coronary angiograms, exhibited exercise-induced perfusion defects in their thallium-201 scintigrams. Coronary spasms might have caused myocardial ischemia in these patients.
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PMID:[Exercise-induced thallium-201 myocardial perfusion defects in angina pectoris without significant coronary artery stenosis]. 209 48

Although exercise-induced ST segment depression is thought to be unreliable marker of myocardial ischemia in the presence of resting electrocardiographic changes, this conclusion is based on limited and disparate data from studies often lacking acceptable measures of ischemia. To determine the diagnostic accuracy of the ST segment response in a blinded prospective protocol, we compared ST deviation to thallium201 SPECT scintigraphy in 95 patients during exercise. Diagnostic accuracy was poor in the 95 patients with resting abnormalities: left bundle branch block (LBBB) = 70%, complete right bundle branch block (cRBBB) = 75%, incomplete right bundle branch block (incRBBB) = 79%, intraventricular conduction delay (IVCD) = 44%, left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) = 59%, digitalis = 53%, compared with a diagnostic accuracy of 90% in 29 patients without resting changes. There were 20 false negative and 17 false positive ST segment responses. The extent and direction of resting ST deviation varied substantially and had no influence on diagnostic accuracy. The extent of change in ST deviation with exercise required for a positive response did not alter diagnostic accuracy: -1.0 mm = 61%, -1.5 mm = 63%, and -2.0 = 61%. While the location of regional ischemia did not influence the accuracy of ST segment analysis, a QRS duration less than 120 msec did improve diagnostic accuracy. Our data confirm that ST segment analysis with exercise testing is not reliable in patients with resting electrocardiographic abnormalities and demonstrates that accuracy is not improved by adjusting for either resting or exercise-induced ST segment changes or for location of the ischemic region.
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PMID:The effect of baseline electrocardiographic abnormalities on the diagnostic accuracy of exercise-induced ST segment changes. 213 78

The classic electrocardiographic abnormalities observed in massive or submassive thromboembolism in the absence of preexistent cardiac or pulmonary disease are: S1Q3T3 pattern, right axis deviation, "pulmonary" P wave, ST segment depression or elevation, subepicardic ischemia and transient right bundle branch block. Left axis deviation due to pulmonary embolism was first described in 1949; this same finding and the presence of low voltage of the frontal plane owed to pulmonary embolism has been reported occasionally in the last decades, but it has had little diffusion. We report on a patient with no prior cardiac or pulmonary disease who suffered massive pulmonary thromboembolism. Electrocardiographically left axis deviation and low voltage of the horizontal plane attributed to pulmonary thromboembolism was observed. The mechanisms that originate this electrocardiographic changes in pulmonary embolism are unknown. Since the electrocardiogram is aspecific method for the diagnosis of this disorder, and the presence of the mentioned changes originate a greater difficulty in the diagnosis; we consider is important to publish it.
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PMID:[Massive pulmonary thromboembolism with left axis deviation and low voltage]. 296 Feb 86

The onset of bundle branch block during acute myocardial infarction is indicative of ischemia in the distribution of the left anterior descending coronary artery. However, whether patients with chronic coronary artery disease and bundle branch block have a predominance of left anterior descending artery lesions is not known. Similarly, the prognostic implications of bundle branch block have been studied primarily in the setting of acute myocardial infarction, and the independent prognostic implications of bundle branch block in patients with chronic coronary artery disease are not known. The electrocardiograms (ECGs) of 15,609 patients with chronic coronary artery disease who underwent coronary and left ventricular angiography as part of the Coronary Artery Surgery Study (CASS) were reviewed, and 522 patients with bundle branch block were identified. Patients with bundle branch block had both more extensive coronary artery disease and worse left ventricular function than did patients without bundle branch block. However, no particular location of coronary artery stenosis or left ventricular wall motion abnormality predominated in patients with bundle branch block. During a follow-up period of 4.9 +/- 1.3 years, 2,386 patients died. Actuarial probability of mortality at 2 years in patients with left bundle branch block was more than five times that in patients without bundle branch block (p less than 0.0001), and in patients with right bundle branch block the mortality rate was approximately twice that in patients without bundle branch block (p less than 0.0001). Stepwise Cox regression analysis showed that left bundle branch block, but not right bundle branch block, was a strong predictor of mortality, independent of degree of heart failure, extent of coronary disease and other variables (p less than 0.0001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Bundle branch block in patients with chronic coronary artery disease: angiographic correlates and prognostic significance. 359 97

Myocardial ischemia, particularly when transmural as in variant angina pectoris, may be associated with ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation and paroxysmal atrioventricular block (15%). Syncope (7%) and sudden death (3%) due to these malignant arrhythmias are sometimes a unique marker of myocardial ischemia. Two-hundred fifty-four patients (220 males and 34 females), aged 5 +/- 9 years with transmural myocardial ischemia related to coronary artery spasm, were studied. Particular attention was paid to the role of syncopal attacks as unique clinical manifestation of silent ischemia. Patients examined were divided into 3 Groups. Group 1 includes 5/254 (2%) patients with atrial fibrillation during acute ischemia. Group 2 was divided into four subgroups: subgroup A includes 17/254 (7%) patients with syncopal attacks due to malignant arrhythmias (ventricular tachycardia and advanced A-V block); subgroup B, 15/254 (6%) patients with documented malignant arrhythmias, without syncopal attacks; subgroup C, 7/254 (3%) with ventricular fibrillation during acute ischemia and subgroup D, 18/254 (7%) patients with history of syncopal attacks without documented arrhythmias during hospital observation. Group 3 includes 17/254 (7%) patients with left anterior hemiblock in basal condition, 7/254 (3%) patients with left anterior hemiblock and one left posterior hemiblock during acute ischemia and one patient with right bundle branch block during acute ischemia. Syncopal symptoms are present in many of these cases of angina pectoris; paroxysmal A-V block is documented in nearly half of the cases with syncope (65%); ventricular tachycardia is frequently demonstrated during ischemia but leads to syncope in only a few cases; patients with syncope do not present specific clinical features.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:When are arrhythmias and conduction disturbances markers of myocardial ischemia at rest? 375

41928 consecutive electrocardiograms were statistically analyzed for the presence of ventricular premature systoles (VPSs) and ischemic ST-T changes in different age groups. VPSs were found in 2314 tracings, whereas signs of myocardial ischemia were noted in 10448 records. VPSs appeared to be more prevalent in the presence of ischemic changes than in the absence of ischemia, and those VPSs in cases with ischemic changes showed a higher correlation with aging. 456 electrocardiograms were then selected to correlate the morphology of VPSs and the areas of myocardial ischemia based on the following criteria: (1) VPSs with the same morphology were present in both limb and precordial leads, and (2) only one representative record was used on each patient who had more than one tracing showing VPSs. It was found that, especially in cases with inferior or anterolateral wall ischemia, right bundle branch block (RBBB) type VPSs appeared to arise from these ischemic areas, whereas such a correlation was less evident in left bundle branch block (LBBB) type VPSs. Although LBBB type VPSs were generally considered benign, those with superiorly oriented QRS axes appeared to be more closely associated with organic cardiac lesions than those with inferiorly oriented axes. Clinical significance of the morphology of VPSs may thus be substantiated.
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PMID:Electrocardiographic ischemic ST-T changes and ventricular premature systoles. 618 16

The electrocardiogram (ECG) of athletes reflects physiologic cardiovascular adaptations that occur in well-conditioned individuals. To more clearly define electrocardiographic changes seen in predominantly power-trained athletes, the ECGs of 289 apparently healthy professional football players were analyzed in detail. The players, aged 21 to 35 years, one-third of whom were black, had a mean body surface area of 2.24 m2, a mean heart rate at rest of 56 +/- 9 beats/min (with 77% (223) having a rate of less than 60 beats/min), and a mean P axis of 30 +/- 25 degrees. A wide QRS-T angle (greater than 60 degrees) was present in 14% (41 players) of the group. The mean PR interval was 0.18 +/- 0.02 second (greater than 0.21 in 9% [26 players]). Although two-thirds of the players had a QRS duration of 0.10 second, only 1 had right bundle branch block and none had left bundle branch block. The sum of S in lead V1 plus R in lead V5 averaged 37 +/- 9 mm, with 35% (101 players) demonstrating voltage criteria for left ventricular hypertrophy. The S + R value varied inversely with weight (r = -0.27, p less than 0.002). The maximum T height in any lead had a mean of 8.6 +/- 3 mm, with 22% (64 players) having a T height greater than or equal to 11 mm. U waves were universally present. ST-T changes mimicking ischemia were noted in 39 of 289 players (13%), 22 (58%) of whom were black (p less than 0.001). The maximal J-point elevation in any lead averaged 1.9 +/- 0.9 mm.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Electrocardiogram of the athlete: an analysis of 289 professional football players. 623 51


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