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)

The effects of intravenous dipyridamole (20 mg) and sublingual nitroglycerin (0.6 mg) were compared at rest and during rapid atrial pacing in patients with significant coronary obstruction. Dipyridamole, which had no significant effect on resting systolic blood pressure, caused a significant increase in coronary sinus flow (CSF) and reduction of coronary vascular resistance (CVR) and arterial-coronary sinus oxygen difference (AO2CSO2 delta), whereas nitroglycerin reduced resting systolic pressure but had no significant effect on CSF, CVR, or AO2-CSO2 delta. Although theses effects of dipyridamole and nitroglycerin on resting systolic pressure, CSF, CVR, and AO2-CSO2 delta were qualitatively similar during rapid atrial pacing, the onset of chest pain and ischemic ECG changes occurred at a lower heart rate following dipyridamole (136 +/- 5 beats/min) than following nitroglycerin (149 +/- 6 beats/min, p less than 0.01). However, maximal double product and myocardial oxygen consumption achieved during pacing were similar following both dipyridamole and nitroglycerin and were less than control pacing values. Coronary dilatation following dipyridamole appears to reduce tolerance to pacing-induced ischemia probably by maldistribution of coronary flow away from ischemic myocardium. Nitroglycerin differs from dipyridamole by improving tolerance to pacing; however, this difference appears to be due to systemic vasodilator effects of nitroglycerin rather than to enhancement of flow to ischemic myocardium.
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PMID:Comparative effect of intravenous dipyridamole and sublingual nitroglycerin on coronary hemodynamics and myocardial metabolism at rest and during atrial pacing in patients with coronary artery disease. 678 Feb 57