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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To assess the clinical, angiographic and procedural correlates of outcome after abrupt vessel closure during coronary angioplasty, results were analyzed of 109 patients (8.3%) who had abrupt vessel closure during 1,319 consecutive coronary angioplasty procedures performed between July 1, 1988 and June 30, 1990. These 109 patients had a mean age of 59 +/- 11 years; 63% were male, 57% had had a prior myocardial infarction and 61% had multivessel disease. Coronary angioplasty was performed in the settings of
acute myocardial infarction
(14%), recent myocardial infarction (36%), unstable angina (34%) and stable
ischemia
(29%). Abrupt vessel closure occurred at a median of 27 min (range 0 min to 5 days) from the first balloon inflation. By angiographic criteria, thrombus or coronary dissection was identified in 20% and 28% of cases, respectively; both thrombus and dissection were present in 7% of closures, and 45% were due to indeterminate mechanisms. Successful reversal of abrupt vessel closure, defined as restoration of normal Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) grade 3 flow without resultant Q wave myocardial infarction, emergency bypass surgery or death, was achieved in 47 patients (43%). By hierarchal analysis, the incidence of death, emergency coronary bypass surgery, Q wave and non-Q wave myocardial infarction was 8%, 20%, 9% and 11%, respectively. Univariate analysis using 23 clinical, morphologic and procedural variables demonstrated that successful outcome after abrupt closure was associated with prolonged balloon inflations (greater than 120 s) (odds ratio = 6.87, p less than 0.001), unstable angina (odds ratio = 2.37, p = 0.034) and placement of an intracoronary stent (odds ratio = 5.33, p = 0.062). By multivariate analysis, independent correlates of successful outcome were prolonged balloon inflations (odds ratio = 5.11, p = 0.001) and intracoronary stenting (odds ratio = 4.37, p = 0.049). Thus, although prolonged balloon inflations and intracoronary stents may improve outcome after abrupt vessel closure, the cumulative risk of morbidity or mortality remains significant and mandates investigation into improved strategies for its prevention and treatment.
...
PMID:Abrupt vessel closure complicating coronary angioplasty: clinical, angiographic and therapeutic profile. 155 14
We studied atrial arrhythmias during the first 12 h of admission to the hospital in 266 consecutive patients with
acute myocardial infarction
who subsequently underwent coronary angiography. Ten patients developed atrial fibrillation, one atrial flutter, and one supraventricular tachycardia. Another five developed sinus dysrhythmias. All of the above patients had an acute inferior myocardial infarction, and in 10 of the 12 patients with supraventricular arrhythmias and in four of five with sinus dysrhythmias, the origin of the sinus node artery started just after an occluded right coronary or left circumflex artery or was involved in the occlusion. Thus,
ischemia
of the sinus node due to coronary occlusion proximal to the origin of the sinus node artery was a likely cause of these arrhythmias.
...
PMID:Early atrial arrhythmias in acute myocardial infarction. Role of the sinus node artery. 155 68
The one year mortality data of 231 patients entering the hospital with
acute myocardial infarction
who did or did not undergo thrombolysis are presented. 49 patients (21.2%) received thrombolytic therapy. 31% were excluded from thrombolytic therapy because of age over 70 years, 29% because of the time lag since onset of symptoms (over 6 hours), 61% because of absent ECG criteria and 32% because of other contraindications. The one year mortality rate was significantly lower in patients undergoing thrombolysis (8.2%) versus patients without thrombolysis (20.3%, p less than 0.05). Mortality in patients without thrombolysis and age greater than 70 years was 23.6%, in patients with late entry 20.1%, in those excluded from thrombolytic therapy with missing ECG elevations 17.9% and in patients with contraindications 28%. If thrombolytic therapy was withheld due to age greater than 70 years or late entry only, mortality was high (33.3% and 38.5% respectively; p less than 0.02 versus lysis). This was not true for patients without significant ST elevation: to the contrary 12 of 42 patients without lysis (28.6%; p less than 0.02 versus lysed patients) and greater than or equal to 2 mm ST elevation irrespective of other exclusion criteria died. Since mortality in patients over 70 years of age or entering the hospital more than 6 hours after onset is of such magnitude (especially if there are ECG signs of ongoing
ischemia
), the risk-benefit ratio should be considered individually to ensure that these high-risk patients are not excluded a priori from thrombolytic therapy.
...
PMID:[Is it justifiable today to perform thrombolysis in only one fifth of the patients with myocardial infarct?]. 155 15
To determine if the occurrence and the consequences of spontaneous predischarge postinfarction
ischemia
could be predicted early after hospital admission, a consecutive series of patients with
acute myocardial infarction
was studied and followed for 3 years. No patient was treated by thrombolysis. Spontaneous predischarge
ischemia
was defined as angina that occurred at rest before hospital discharge, at least 3 days after the acute event, and that was accompanied by electrocardiographic changes, but not by an increase in cardiac enzymes. Patients who died within the first 3 days were excluded from analysis. Among the 943 patients who survived at least 3 days, 165 (17.5%) had spontaneous
ischemia
before discharge. They had a higher 1-year post-hospital mortality (16 vs. 10%), but did not have significantly higher total 3-year mortality rates. Four independent, early available variables predictive of the occurrence of spontaneous
ischemia
were selected from a stepwise logistic discriminant analysis: history of angina before infarction, non-Q-wave infarct, absence of smoking, and higher age. Among the 165 patients with spontaneous
ischemia
, 3 independent variables predictive of 3-year mortality were selected stepwise: left ventricular function score, history of previous infarction, and absence of smoking.
...
PMID:Predictors of spontaneous predischarge ischemia following acute myocardial infarction. 156 29
One-hundred-and-fifty-five consecutive symptom-free patients underwent maximal treadmill exercise testing, rest and stress radionuclide angiography at least two months after an uncomplicated
acute myocardial infarction
; of these, 90 underwent coronary angiography. All patients were followed-up for a mean of 32 +/- 13 months regarding the prediction of hard (death and reinfarction) and soft (angina and coronary surgery) coronary events. The specificity, sensitivity, positive and negative predictive value of exercise stress test were 47%, 76% and 41% for any coronary events; none of the patients who incurred a hard coronary event showed
ischemia
during electrocardiographic exercise tests. Sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value for failure to increase the ejection fraction of at least 5% were 60%, 45% and 30% for any coronary event and 25%, 49% and 2% for any hard coronary event. The presence of multivessel disease at coronary angiography showed a sensitivity of 62% for any coronary event and of 67% for hard coronary events; specificities were 66% and 57%, and predictive values were 52% and 10%, respectively. It is concluded that electrocardiographic exercise testing, radionuclide angiography and coronary angiography are not helpful two months after an episode of uncomplicated myocardial infarction in order to identify patients who will suffer a new coronary event.
...
PMID:Value of exercise stress test, radionuclide angiography and coronary angiography in predicting new coronary events in asymptomatic patients after a first episode of myocardial infarction. 156 57
This study investigated the clinical characteristics of
acute myocardial infarction
(
AMI
) complicated by recurrent
ischemia
, especially relating to the electrocardiographic ST changes during the attacks. Fifty-six patients with
AMI
were complicated by recurrent
ischemia
(
ischemia
group), and 238 were not (non-
ischemia
group). The
ischemia
group was preceded by prior episodes of angina or myocardial infarction in 88%, as compared with 65% in the non-
ischemia
group (p less than 0.05). There were non Q wave infarction in 45% of the
ischemia
group, and 24% of the non-
ischemia
group (p less than 0.05). The overall in-hospital mortality rate was similar in the
ischemia
group (13%) and in the non-
ischemia
group (17%), although the causes were predominantly pump failure in the former and cardiac rupture in the latter. ST segment elevation occurred in 29 patients and ST depression occurred in 26 patients of the
ischemia
group during the attacks. Multivessel coronary arterial lesions were more frequently present in the latter subgroup than the former (38% vs 79%, p less than 0.05). The in-hospital cardiac deaths were also more frequently noted in the latter subgroup. Recurrent
ischemia
after
AMI
with concomitant electrocardiographic ST depression is a high risk subgroup, and, therefore, aggressive revascularization procedures may be indicated in such cases if suitable.
...
PMID:[Recurrent ischemia after acute myocardial infarction: clinical profile and significance of electrocardiographic ST changes during the attacks]. 157 Apr 28
It has been suggested that unstable angina at rest, like
acute myocardial infarction
, might be associated with a thrombotic process. In order to study the hypothesis that myocardial ischemia during exercise could also be associated with an activation of blood coagulation and/or fibrinolysis, we investigated the presence of plasma markers of a prethrombotic or thrombotic state (thrombin-antithrombin III complexes TAT, prothrombin fragment F1 + 2, and D-dimers DD) in 100 consecutive patients with confirmed or suspected coronary artery disease during ergometric test with myocardial thallium-201 scintigraphy. Symptoms and scintigrams allowed to define three groups of patients: those showing no
ischemia
(n = 79) and those with symptomatic (n = 8) or silent myocardial ischemia (n = 13). Before exercise, DD and TAT levels were not significantly different among the three groups. On the other hand, the F1 + 2 levels were slightly albeit significantly higher in the patients without
ischemia
than in the patients with symptomatic or silent
ischemia
. After exercise, no significant difference was found between the three groups. Exercise induced a significant and parallel increase in both the TAT and the F1 + 2 levels (but not of the DD levels) in the three groups. Thus, our study does not support the hypothesis that myocardial ischemia, silent or symptomatic, is associated with an activation of plasma coagulation and fibrinolysis that can be distinguished from the exercise-induced thrombin generation.
...
PMID:Effects of exercise test on plasma markers of an activation of coagulation and/or fibrinolysis in patients with symptomatic or silent myocardial ischemia. 160 40
Two-dimensional echocardiography is a versatile, accurate, and readily available method for the assessment of cardiac anatomy and function, and extensive experience has been gained in the analysis of left ventricular wall motion. Using modern imaging techniques, regional as well as global wall motion analysis can be performed. Echocardiography can be used in conjunction with a protocol for either exercise or pharmacologic cardiovascular stress in order to identify the distribution and severity of coronary artery disease, with the induction of a regional wall motion abnormality being a sign of myocardial ischemia. The use of dobutamine infusion to accomplish stress echocardiography is a safe, accurate, and practical method for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease in patients unable to exercise. In addition to the evaluation of inducible
ischemia
, preliminary work is being performed with dobutamine stress echocardiography for the assessment of risk and patient prognosis following
acute myocardial infarction
and as an indication of tissue viability for myocardium that remains dysfunctional at rest following thrombolytic therapy.
...
PMID:Dobutamine stress echocardiography. 160 25
Clot dissolution with restoration of infarct-related artery blood flow is the likely mechanism for the improved prognosis and mortality reduction seen after thrombolytic therapy of
acute myocardial infarction
. A pilot study has suggested that 100 mg of recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA) infused over 90 min may lead to higher patency rates than the current standard of 100 mg over 3 h. In this multicenter, randomized, open label trial, 281 patients with
acute myocardial infarction
receive 100 mg of rt-PA according to either the standard 3-h infusion regimen (an initial 10-mg bolus followed by 50 mg for the 1st h, then 20 mg/h for 2 h) or an accelerated 90-min regimen (15-mg bolus followed by 50 mg over 30 min, then 35 mg over 60 min). All patients also received intravenous heparin and oral aspirin during and after rt-PA infusion. At 60 min after initiation of the rt-PA infusion, the observed angiographic patency rates were 76% (95% confidence intervals 65% to 84%) in the accelerated regimen group and 63% in the control group (52% to 73%, p = 0.03). At 90 min these rates were 81% (73% to 87%) and 77% (68% to 84%), respectively (p = 0.21). Both randomized groups experienced similar rates of recurrent
ischemia
, reinfarction, angiographic reocclusion, other complications of myocardial infarction (including stroke and death) and bleeding complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Randomized angiographic trial of recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (alteplase) in myocardial infarction. RAAMI Study Investigators. 160 20
Rapid reperfusion of infarcting myocardium has become a cornerstone of modern medical care. The role of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) in this treatment of
acute myocardial infarction
is not clear. PTCA is effective in the early hours of MI as primary reperfusion therapy, in lieu of thrombolysis. Arterial patency using this strategy is excellent with low complication rates, and this therapy is comparable and may be superior to thrombolysis when myocardial performance and recurrent
ischemia
are considered. PTCA is the treatment of choice for the patient in whom thrombolysis is contraindicated, or who develops cardiogenic shock. The role of angioplasty as secondary therapy for myocardial infarction after pharmacologic thrombolysis and reperfusion is controversial. The evidence is clear that immediate PTCA after successful thrombolysis is not warranted. The decision for elective angioplasty after successful or unsuccessful thrombolysis should probably be judged on a case to case basis.
...
PMID:A rationale for the use of percutaneous transluminal angioplasty in the setting of acute myocardial infarction. 161 11
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