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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A decrease in systolic blood pressure that occurs with treadmill exercise testing may be a sign of reversible ischemic left ventricular dysfunction. To test this hypothesis, we examined retrospectively the postoperative treadmill responses of 37 patients who had exertional hypotension (end exercise systolic blood pressure less than or equal to initial preexercise levels) before coronary arterial bypass grafting. This group of 37 patients was characterized preoperatively by an abnormal exercise electrocardiogram (36 patients), multiple vessel occlusive disease (36 patients) and a normal ejection fraction at rest (32 patients). Postoperative exercise tests showed improvement in hemodynamic and electrocardiographic changes with reversal of exertional hypotension (33 patients), and conversion to a normal exercise electrocardiogram (29 patients). Coronary bypass surgery can be expected to reverse exertional hypotension in patients with symptomatic
angina pectoris
and evidence of
ischemia
in the exercise electrocardiogram.
...
PMID:Reversal of exertional hypotension after coronary bypass grafting. 31 49
The effect of coronary arterial bypass surgery on exercise-induced ventricular arrhythmias and their relation to sudden death was examined in 102 patients with stable
angina pectoris
randomly assigned to medical and surgical therapy (54 and 48 patients, respectively). Symptom-limited treadmill tests were performed at entry and at 1 and 5 years. The surgical group demonstrated significant improvement in exercise performance at 1 year compared with the medical group, and at 5 years exercise-induced
ischemia
as evidenced by S-T depression and exertional angina remained substantially decreased in the surgical group with little change in the medical group. However, the frequency and severity of exercise-induced ventricular arrhythmias in each group remained unchanged at 1 and 5 years from those at entry. Similar results were obtained from an evaluation of ventricular arrhythmias in the electrocardiogram at rest. With the exception of exercise-induced ventricular tachycardia and fibrillation, no relation was found between ventricular arrhythmias and sudden death. Coronary bypass grafting does not decrease the frequency or severity of exercise-induced or resting ventricular arrhythmias. In patients with stable
angina pectoris
, with the exception of ventricular tachycardia and fibrillation, exercise-induced ventricular arrhythmias are poor predictors of sudden death. The data suggest that exercise-induced ventricular arrhythmias may not be related to
ischemia
but to other effects of exercise such as cardiac stimulation by catecholamines or other factors.
...
PMID:Effect of coronary arterial bypass surgery on exercise-induced ventricular arrhythmias. Long-term follow-up of a prospective randomized study. 31 62
To determine the importance of different methods of myocardial protection for combined aortic valve replacement and coronary revascularization, we analyzed the records of 82 consecutive patients who underwent the combined procedure between 1973 and 1978. Sixty-three (77%) had
angina
and 63 (77%) were in New York Heart Association Functional Class III or IV. Moderate to severe left ventricular impairment was present in 59%, and the mean number of diseased vessels was 1.9 per patient. Group I consisted of 18 patients with intermittent
ischemia
, almost all of whom had operation between 1973 and 1976. Group IIa consisted of 24 patients operated on between 1973 and December, 1976, with coronary perfusion, and Group IIb had 18 patients in whom a similar technique was used in 1977 and 1978. Group III consisted of 22 patients operated on in 1977 and 1978 in whom cold chemical cardioplegia was used. The early mortality (less than 30 days) for Group I was 50% and for Group IIa 29%. There were no deaths in Group IIb and Group III. The incidence of perioperative myocardial infarction was 21% in Group I, 6% in Group IIa, 11% in Group IIb, and zero in Group III. The incidence of cardiogenic shock requiring prolonged inotropic support and intraaortic balloon counterpulsation was significantly less in Group III (9%) than in Group IIb (50%) (p less than 0.05). If other manifestations of myocardial injury, such as perioperative infarction and cardiogenic shock requiring intraaortic balloon counterpulsation or inotropic support, are taken into consideration, cold chemical cardioplegia appears to provide better myocardial protection than coronary perfusion of the fibrillating heart.
...
PMID:The importance of myocardial protection in combined aortic valve replacement and myocardial revascularization. 31 12
We studied regional myocardial perfusion by scintigraphic computer-assisted analysis of initial distribution, washout rates, and residual activity of 133Xe injected into the left coronary artery of four patients with normal arteriograms and 14 patients with coronary stenosis. At rest, residual activity in poststenotic regions was always greater than in control regions, but initial washout rates were not slower. During
angina
, following xenon injections, the amount of indicator distributed to the poststenotic regions was markedly reduced; the increase of the initial washout rates was smaller than in control regions relative to rest, and residual activity was higher. Initial washout rates did not differ as much as from those of normal myocardium because in severe
ischemia
too little indicator is deposited initially in these regions to produce a change of any magnitude. Indeed, when
angina
was induced immediately after the xenon injection, poststenotic washout rates became much slower during
angina
than at rest, a finding that implicates functional factors in impairing poststenotic myocardial perfusion during
angina
.
...
PMID:Regional myocardial perfusion in patients with atherosclerotic coronary artery disease, at rest and during angina pectoris induced by tachycardia. 31 20
Blood flow disturbances in the gastrointestinal tract can lead to serious illness. They can be acute or chronic, their cause may be arterial or venous occlusion or hypotonia. Lesions of the gastrointestinal tract caused by
ischemia
depend on localisation, acuteness and degree of the blood flow disturbance. They may reach from focal and segmental ischemic lesions to extensive necroses of the entire intestinal tubes. The most serious ischemic disease is the embolic and thrombotic occlusion of the arteria mesenterica superior due to previous arterosclerotic damage. Infarction of a large part of the intestines and peritonitis can be the consequence. These patients' only chance of survival is early diagnosis--as a rule exclusively via angiography--and immediate surgery. Chronic occlusion of the arteria mesenterica superior leads to
angina
abdominalis which mainly occurs after food intake and can last for hours. The reason may also be a general arteriosclerosis. Men are affected more frequently and at a younger age than women. As a consequence of lowered intestinal blood flow these patients suffer from malabsorption and heavy weight loss. Conservative therapy is not effective. These patients, too, will have to be treated surgically after previous angiography. Vascular disease with decreased blood flow as its consequence can be found in a number of inflammatory diseases, in malign hypertensian, in collagen disease and in other more rare diseases as pseudoxanthoma elasticum or Ehlers-Danlos-syndrome. In the case of ischemic colitis arterial and more rarely venous occlusions cause decreased blood flow in the big bowel. A frequent consequence is colitis in the left colon which is characterized by acuteness, pain in the left side of the abdomen and by heavy rectal bleeding. Diagnosis is established by means of endoscopy, barium enema and angiography. Primarily therapy of ischemic colitis is of the conservative type. In severe cases with gangrene and peritonitis the colon has to be resected.
...
PMID:[Disorders of the blood circulation in the gastrointestinal tract]. 32 26
The relation between global and regional left ventricular function and electrocardiographic signs of
ischemia
at rest and during submaximal supine exercise was studied in 27 patients 2 to 3 weeks after acute myocardial infarction. Dynamic myocardial scintigraphy was performed at rest and during submaximal exercise utilizing an in vivo method of labeling red blood cells with technetium-99m pertechnetate. Gated radionuclide blood pool scintigrams were obtained in a modified left anterior oblique, and in some patients also in the right anterior oblique projection, to measure left ventricular ejection fraction and segmental wall motion. Electrocardiographic monitoring of heart rate and rhythm was provided during the exercise. The submaximal exercise test was terminated when the patient's heart rate reached 125 beats/min or if
angina
, malignant ventricular ectopy or electrocardiographic evidence of myocardial ischemia developed before this rate was reached. The data demonstrate that patients with a recent anterior myocardial infarct, in contrast to patients with a recent inferior or nontransmural infarct, manifest a significant reduction in left ventricular ejection fraction with submaximal exercise. Of the eight patients with an anterior infarct, seven had segmental wall motion abnormalities at rest. Four of these eight manifested more severe abnormalities with submaximal exercise; three had abnormalities at rest that did not change with exercise. Four of the eight had a positive electrocardiographic response during exercise (two were taking digoxin). Of these four, only two had more marked wall motion abnormalities with effort. Of the 13 patients with an inferior infarct, 11 had apparently normal wall motion in the modified left anterior oblique projection at rest, including 2 who manifested segmental wall motion abnormalities with submaximal exercise; the 2 remaining patients had wall motion abnormalities at rest that, on exercise, became more marked in one and were unchanged in one. Four of the 13 had a positive electrocardiographic response with exercise (one was taking digoxin); only one of these had a detectably more severe wall motion abnormality with exercise. Of the six patients with a nontransmural infarct, four had no identifiable wall motion abnormalities at rest; in one of these, an abnormality developed with exercise. The remaining two patients had wall motion abnormalities at rest; in one, a positive electrocardiographic ischemic response developed with exercise. Patients with an anterior infarct appear to have a different functional ventricular response to submaximal exercise at the time of hospital discharge than patients with an inferior or nontransmural infarct. To identify ischemic responses with submaximal exercise in these patients one should ideally use both electrocardiographic monitoring and dynamic myocardial scintigraphy.
...
PMID:Submaximal exercise testing after acute myocardial infarction: myocardial scintigraphic and electrocardiographic observations. 35 68
The significance of asymptomatic episodes of ischemic type S-T segment depression was studied in 20 patients with coronary heart disease. Continuous 10 hour electrocardiographic recordings accompanied by detailed daily diaries of activity and symptoms were obtained periodically during a mean time of 16 months. All patients had ischemic type S-T depression associated with
angina pectoris
during treadmill exercise. Measurements of heart rate, S-T depression and exercise level at the onset of
angina
obtained during repeated controlled exercise tests at the start of each study period were compared with the measurements recorded during daily activity. After 2,826 hours of recording, 411 transient epidsodes of ischemic type S-T depression were noted during usual daily activity. Only 101 (25 percent) of these episodes were associated with
angina
. The remaining episodes were unrelated to other symptoms or to posture. All occurred at heart rates significantly lower than those observed at the onset of
angina
during exercise testing. Of these episodes of asymptomatic S-T depression, 72 percent occurred only at rest or during very light activity such as slow walking or sitting. Nitroglycerin administered hourly significantly reduced the frequency of these episodes, thus supporting the concept that they represent painless
ischemia
. Because the episodes of asymptomatic ischemic type S-T depression occurred more frequently than
angina
during usual daily activity and were evident at heart rates and activity levels well below those expected to evoke
ischemia
, they may be caused by factors other than those that cause
angina
.
...
PMID:Transient asymptomatic S-T segment depression during daily activity. 40 3
Regional and overall left ventricular contraction reserve was studied in 14 patients with coronary heart disease, in 5 healthy subjects and in 4 patients before and after aorto-coronary bypass surgery. Quantification of overall contraction was based on ventricular volumes and ejection fraction. Regional contraction reserve was calculated with the hemiaxis method and a ventricular score. Contraction reserve under nitroglycerin and in postextrasystolic beats was compared. For routine quantification of contraction reserve the ventricular score is recommended. For research purposes the hemiaxis method is to be preferred. Postextrasystolic beats are better suited for analysis of contraction reserve than are angiograms following administration of nitroglycerin. This is due to the minor expense of the procedure, furthermore, postextrasystolic beats allow better differentiation between contracting and non-contracting areas. Left ventricular contraction reserve is larger in patients with coronary heart disease,
angina pectoris
and ischemic reactions in the exercise ECG than in control patients. These findings are based on overall and on regional volume parameters. A quantitatively greater improvement in contraction could be provoked in the anterior wall than in the posterior wall. Regional contraction improved significantly in most cases either in the anterior wall or in the posterior wall; rarely it improved simultaneously in both left ventricular regions. In a few cases contraction deteriorated in one area with a simultaneous improvement in the opposite area. Overall and regional ventricular function, as assessed preoperatively by contraction reserve determinations could not be completely regained in normal beats after successful bypass surgery. Differences in the regional contraction reserve seemed to be mainly due to varying degrees of
ischemia
and scarring.
...
PMID:[Left ventricular contraction reserve in coronary heart disease. Evaluation, quantification and prognostic value (author's transl)]. 40 89
Thirty patients with triple-vessel coronary artery disease proven by angiography, symptomatic
angina
and a positive ECG stress test were evaluated with thallium-201 (201TI) scintigraphy. Twenty patients also had aortocoronary saphenous vein bypass surgery; 15 of them had repeat noninvasive evaluation. Seventy percent of these patients showed
ischemia
by 201TI scintigraphy, of which one-half returned to normal after surgery. Postoperative reversion of the ECG stress test together with 201TI stress/reperfusion imaging correlated well with the completeness of surgical revascularization. We could not explain the prevalence (80%) of infarcts detected by 201TI in this group, of which 76% could be anatomically correlated to epicardial scars. The positivity of infarcts by 201TI exceeded that predicted by previous history of infarction, Q waves on resting ECG or ventriculographic akinesis. These observations suggest that 201TI scintigraphy is a useful noninvasive tool in the follow-up and understanding of patients with coronary heart disease. These conclusions also support the concept that 201TI stress imaging need not have the identical connotation as the ECG stress test.
...
PMID:Thallium-201 myocardial scintigraphy in patients with triple-vessel disease and ischemic exercise stress tests. 42 10
The influence of the Valsalva maneuver (VM) on myocardial ischemia was evaluated in 24 patients with coronary heart disease. Clinical and hemodynamic responses to the VM were studied during acute
ischemia
manifested by
angina pectoris
with transient left ventricular (LV) dysfunction and compared with responses during nonischemic intervals. In the absence of evidence for acute
ischemia
(
angina
and increased LV end-diastolic pressure), six patients had abnormal hemodynamic responses to the VM. Five had lack of systolic pressure overshoot and in one, systolic pressure did not decline during straining. When the VM was performed during an ischemic episode, 14 patients had abnormal responses (12 with lack of overshoot in phase IV and two with lack of systolic pressure decline in phase II). In 18 patients a prompt decline in LV end-diastolic pressure occurred with the disappearance of
angina
during the VM. These changes uniformly occurred during the latter part of straining (VM phase II) as cardiac size and systolic pressure declined. No adverse effects occurred when a VM was performed during acute
ischemia
. Our observations suggest that the VM abruptly reduces determinants of cardiac oxygen demand, relieving acute
ischemia
without harmful effects.
...
PMID:Effects of the Valsalva maneuver on myocardial ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease. 43 22
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