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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 the beta-adernergic blocking drug acebutolol were studied in 23 patients with angina pectoris and angiographically documented coronary artery disease. Patients were evaluated clinically, by graded treadmill testing and by 24-hour Holter monitoring in the control state, after 2 weeks treatment with placebo, and after 2 weeks treatment with 600 mg. and then 1,200 mg. of acebutolol. Acebutolol (in a daily dose of 600 mg.) was an effective antianginal drug: the number of clinical attacks of angina pectoris (p less than 0.001) and the consumption of sublingual nitrate decreased (p less than 0.01), there was a significant increase in the treadmill effort tolerance as measured by the time to appearance of ischemic ECG changes (p less than 0.001) and the total work performed (p less than 0.001), and there was also a significant decrease in ischemic ST segment depression on 24-hour Holter monitoring. Treatment with 1,200 mg. acebutolol was associated with a further decrease in heart rate and a further improvement in effort tolerance on treadmill testing (p less than 0.05). On the large dose of the drug, however, there was no further clinical improvement, and no further improvement on 24-hour ECG monitoring; several patients complained of weakness and fatigue. Graded treadmill testing was an excellent objective method for assessing physical effort tolerance and its improvement after treatment with the beta-blocking drug. Twenty-four-hour Holter monitoring was a useful and complementary test, especially in patients who stopped exercising on the treadmill because of fatigue or weakness, and especially for assessing the efficacy of beta-blockade in controlling emotionally induced tachycardia and ischemia in the patient's own daily environment.
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PMID:Evaluation of the beta-blocking drug acebutolol in angina pectoris. 49 6

The type of angina pectoris was determined in 47 women and 27 men aged 40 or less who then underwent quantitative left cineventriculography, coronary arteriography and atrial pacing test with determination of lactate concentrations from arterial and coronary sinus blood samples. The 29/74 patients with atypical angina and no narrowings on coronary arteriography (Group I) gave no pathological atrial pacing tests but 9 had pathological lactate tests. Group II consisted of 27/74 patients with typical angina but normal coronary arteriography. In these the atrial pacing test was pathological in 20 and the lactate test in 11. Coronary narrowings of 50% or more were found in 18/74 patients (Group III), who all had pathological pacing tests but only 9 pathological lactate tests. No statistical differences could be elicited between diagnostic groups in the quantitative evaluation of left ventricular function and it could be regarded as normal in 42/74 patients. The left ventricular mass index exceeded the control level in 6 patients in Group I and in 10 patients in Group II who all had a net lactate production upon pacing. The end-diastolic volume index was above control level in 11 patients in Group II, in whom the ST depression in pacing test was the only finding indicating ischemia. The hoop stress values exceeded the control level in both of these subgroups. In Group III 7 patients had a high left ventricular mass index and 4 a billowing mitral leaflet. The changes observed suggest disturbed functioning of left ventricle.
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PMID:Tests for ischaemia and left ventricular function in young patients with effort-induced chest pain. 51 93

In 13 patients with acute coronary insufficiency (intermediate syndrome, postinfarction angina, and progressive angina), samples of the ischemic area of the myocardium were studied with the electron microscope and by morphometric methods in order to describe quantitatively the mitochondrial population. Three indices were measured: the fractional volume of the mitochondrial compartment of the cytoplasm, the number of mitochondria per unit volume of heart tissue, and the average individual mitochondrial volume. As a control, the same study was performed on samples obtained from patients with chronic coronary insufficiency and mitral stenosis. In all the ischemic hearts the most conspicuous ultrastructural modification of the muscle cells consisted in an irregular distribution of the mitochondriranules. Generally, odd shaped mitochondria were found. The modifications were not diffuse, and almost normal heart muscle cells were seen alongside deeply altered ones. In addition a definite decrease in the fractional volume of the mitochondrial compartment was found, which was apparently due to a decrease in the number of mitochondria per unit volume of cytoplasm. The average individual mitochondrial volume was similar in acute coronary insufficiency and in the control cases. On the basis of this evidence it is postulated that in sublethal ischemia definite ultrastructural modifications of the heart muscle cells are associated with a decrease in the number of mitochondria per unit volume of cytoplasm.
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PMID:Ultrastructural and morphometric study of the human heart muscle cell in acute coronary insufficiency. 52 66

99mtechnetium diphosphonate was used in 81 patients for myocardial imaging. 46 of the patients suffered, 2-6 days prior to the test, from an acute transmural infarction provided by clinical, ECG, and enzymatic evidence; the scintigram was definitely positive in 43, equivocal in 2, and negative in 1. In 16 patients with subendocardial infarctions, in 9 the scintigram showed a positive result, in 1 it was equivocal, and in6 patients negative. In 6 other patients who suffered from acute chest pain, followed by enzyme changes, but no ECG evidence of infarction throughout the hospitalization period, the scan was positive in all. In 13 patients with acute ischemia (unstable 'crescendo' angina), 9 had a positive, 1 an equivocal, and 3 a negative scan. We conclude that radionuclide imaging is a valuable addition to the methods already available for diagnosis of myocardial infarction. With the use of diphosphonate as the tracer, we found that acutely ischemic myocardium that later may recover, gives also positive imaging.
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PMID:Radionuclide imaging of the heart in myocardial infarction and acute ischemia by 99mtechnetium diphosphonate. 59 Feb 93

Patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) frequently experience chest pain which may, expecially in older subjects and males, be difficult to differentiate from angina pectoris. Electrocardiographic (ECG) changes, ventricular arrhythmias, metabolic abnormalities and rare reports of myocardial infarction and sudden death further suggest the presence of an ischemic process in these patients. The recognition of accompanying coronary artery disease (CAD) and exclusion of other causes of ischemia, therefore, may be important in determining the prognosis and appropriate therapy for such patients.
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PMID:Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy in patients with mitral valve prolapse: Its advantage over stress electrocardiography in diagnosing associated coronary artery disease and its implications for the etiology of chest pain. 61 88

Twelve different approaches to laboratory diagnosis of angina pectoris are reviewed here. They employ no fewer than seven different means of intentionally provoking a disparity between myocardial requirement and supply: dynamic exercise, hypoxia, prandial stress, raised systemic vascular resistance, paced tachycardia, mental stress, and exposure to normal environment. Of these, only dynamic exercise and the diverse combinations of stresses in the normal environment are capable of altering the heart's oxygen requirement-supply ratio threefold or more, accounting for the successful results from tests using these means of stress. The reviewed tests use three different means of detecting myocardial ischemia provoked by stress: electrocardiography to indicate impaired ventricular repolarization, indirect graphic records sensitive to impairment of mechanical ventricular function, and detection of insufficient myocardial perfusion patterns by radioactive tracer. The latter approach is particularly appealing because it directly reflects the pathophysiologic anomaly of interest. It should be remembered, however, that the basic differences in these methods of detecting ischemia make them complementary to each other and encourage their use in combination for improved diagnostic sensitivity.
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PMID:Interesting approaches to the diagnosis of angina pectoris. 63 19

In 12 patients with coronary artery disease and typical exercise-induced angina pectoris hemodynamic and ECG studies were performed at rest and during ergometer load in supine position. During the attacks of angina there was a significant ST-depression in all cases accompanied by elevated pulmonary capillary wedge pressures (PCP) and pulmonary artery mean pressures (PAM). Intravenous administration of 40 mg furosemide showed consistent hemodynamic changes. Cardiac output (CO) dropped significantly by 15.9 per cent at rest (p is less than 0.001) and by 6.9 per cent during exercise (p is less than 0.005). The PCP during exercise following furosemide decreased from 32.9 mmHg to 11.8 mm Hg (p is less than 0.001) and was paralleled by a significant decrease of PAM, indicating reduction of ischemia-related hemodynamic impairment. Furthermore, there was a striking improvement of Ecg findings during ergometer load in 9 of 12 patients as well as a relief of anginal pain in 11 of 12 patients. The present demonstration of antianginal properties of furosemide may be explained by the reduction of ventricular volumes and pressures, resulting in a decrease of myocardial wall stress. These effects are suggested to be related to the peripheral venodilator capacity of furosemide in conjunction with its diuretic properties. Thus, in patients with left ventricular dysfunction secondary to ischemia, intravenous furosemide may have salutary effects on myocardial oxygen requirements resembling the action of nitroglycerin, but without its oxygen-wasting effects on tachycardia.
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PMID:[Effects of furosemide on hemodynamic, electrocardiographic, and symptomatic responses to exercise in patients with angina pectoris (author's transl)]. 63 18

The mortality in acute intestinal ischemia is high, and 50% of such patients have previous attacks of abdominal angina due to chronic intestinal ischemia. Vascular reconstruction is remarkably successful in relieving the symptoms of chronic intesintal ischemia and for this reason angiographic examination is recommended in all patients in whom chronic intestinal ischemia is suspected. If the diagnosis is established by arteriography with appropriate supporting evidence, vascular reconstruction should be performed.
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PMID:The surgical treatment of chronic intestinal ischemia. 63 91

Four patients underwent exercise testing because of a history of pain in the chest; all four developed marked elevation of the S-T segment only during recovery after exercise. Three of the four patients showed ST-segment depression during exercise, but ST-segment elevation was absent until two or more minutes after cessation of exercise. ST-segment elevation after exercise was accompanied by hypotension in three patients and by ventricular arrhythmias in one. Subsequent coronary angiographic studies revealed normal or minimally diseased coronary arteries in two patients and significant coronary lesions in the other two. Review of the literature shows that contrary to the prevailing belief, over half of the patients with Prinzmetal's variant angina have electrocardiographic changes diagnostic of ischemia during exercise testing. Over half of the patients with abnormal findings on tests during exercise display ST-segment elevation as a manifestation of ischemia; however, delayed ST-segment elevation of the type seen in these four patients is distinctly uncommon, having previously been described in only three individual case reports. The pathophysiology of this response is uncertain but may relate to rapid alterations in the autonomic balance during recovery after exercise.
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PMID:ST-segment elevation during recovery from exercise. A new manifestation of Prinzmetal's variant angina. 67 40

A patient who had endocarditis on a prosthetic aortic valve and who had undergone two aortic valvular replacements developed classic angina pectoris. Cardiac catheterization revealed an aneurysm of the left sinus of Valsalva, which constricted a proximal segment of the left circumflex coronary artery during systole. This type of dynamic coronary arterial narrowing has not been previously described secondary to an aneurysm of a sinus of Valsalva and may be responsible for this patient's manifestations of ischemia.
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PMID:Aneurysm of sinus of Valsalva: cause of dynamic coronary constriction after aortic valvular replacement and bacterial endocarditis. 68 94


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