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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inverted T waves due to coronary artery disease and previous myocardial infarction were observed to revert ot normal, upright position during
ischemia
in 38 patients. The normalization of inverted T waves was seen on the electroencephalograms of 19 patients during spontaneously occurring
angina pectoris
and of 11 patients when
ischemia
was provoked by treadmill exercise; for 8 patients, normalization occurred during the administration of isoproterenol hydrochloride and during the consequent episode of
angina pectoris
. The mechanism for normalization may be the algebraic sum of the extent of ST segment elevation and the amplitude of the T waves of acute
ischemia
plus the extent of preexisting ST segment depression and the degree of T wave inversion, to result in isoelectric ST segment and upright T wave. As with myocardial infarction, reciprocal changes may also be recorded. However, the reciprocal nature may be masked since either acute ST segment elevation of T wave inversion, or both, may not be recorded in the leads reflecting the ischemic area because of normalization.
...
PMID:Normalization of abnormal T waves in ischemia. 126 47
One hundred consecutive aortic valve replacements were studied. Fifteen patients had a myocardial infarction as a result of the operation, and four of the five deaths in the series stemmed from this group. In the four deaths from infarction, autopsy revealed occlusion of a main coronary artery. This was attributable to coronary perfusion in three instances. All of the 11 survivors who sustained an infarct were free of
angina
and left ventricular failure 6 weeks after the operation. Patients with infarcts had longer bypass times and larger aortic systolic gradients than the patients who did not have an infarct. It is suggested that an infarct can occur as the result of occlusion of a main coronary artery; this is a fatal event commonly related to trauma from the coronary perfusion cannula. Alternatively, infarction may result from regional
ischemia
, perhaps without vessel occlusion, and is associated with long bypass times and with large aortic valve gradients. In such cases the prognosis is good. However, myocardial infarction was the major cause of death in this series.
...
PMID:Myocardial infarction complicating aortic valve replacement. 127 36
Nicorandil is a potent coronary vasodilator. To assess its long-term antianginal effect, we designed a randomized, parallel double-blind trial of 6 weeks' duration comparing nicorandil (10 or 20 mg b.i.d.) with propranolol (40 or 80 mg t.i.d.). The study comprised 77 men with stable
angina
, no maintenance medication at entry, and an exercise test positive for
angina
and ST-segment depression. The therapy was started with 10 mg nicorandil b.i.d. or 40 mg propranolol t.i.d. After 3 weeks, the dosage could be doubled according to clinical criteria. Four men receiving nicorandil and one receiving propranolol were withdrawn with side effects; in three cases, the data were not complete. Thus, comparative data were obtained in 69 patients; in 51 of these (26 receiving nicorandil and 25 receiving propranolol), the dosage was increased to the higher level. Blood pressure and heart rate were unaltered by nicorandil and lowered by propranolol. The number of anginal attacks decreased relative to baseline on nicorandil and propranolol (p < 0.002), but total exercise duration was not influenced by either drug. The exercise test performed 2 h after either pill ingestion showed a decrease and a delay in occurrence of myocardial ischemia. The test performed 12 h after medication exhibited reduced
ischemia
, whereas only propranolol resulted in delayed ST-segment depression. The double product of heart rate and systolic blood pressure was affected only slightly by nicorandil and reduced significantly by propranolol (p < 0.001). Thus, nicorandil medication affords similar improvement as propranolol in patients with
angina pectoris
, but the mode of action appears to be different.
...
PMID:Efficacy of nicorandil versus propranolol in mild stable angina pectoris of effort: a long-term, double-blind, randomized study. 128 78
In a randomized, cross-over, double-blind study, the effects of nifedipine were compared with those of diltiazem in 20 patients with severe stable
angina pectoris
and multivessel coronary artery disease treated with nitrates and beta-blockers. The comparison was performed by bicycle ergometry, clinical evaluation, and ambulatory 24-h ECG monitoring for 7-8 weeks. As compared with placebo, both nifedipine and diltiazem significantly reduced the daily number of anginal attacks and nitroglycerin consumption; prolonged exercise duration, time to 1-mm ST segment depression, and to onset of
angina
; and reduced the sum of ST segment depressions at maximal identical load in ergometry. In ambulatory ECG monitoring, only nifedipine significantly diminished the duration of asymptomatic ST segment depression as compared with placebo. Antianginal and antiischemic effects of nifedipine and diltiazem were similar. Both nifedipine and diltiazem significantly increased the effects of treatment with nitrates and beta-blockers. Administration of nifedipine was safer because at night diltiazem caused significant bradycardia despite careful titration of optimum doses of the drug. Although the maximum well-tolerated doses of conventional medication suppressed anginal symptoms in some patients, they did not abolish
ischemia
either at ergometry or in daily life.
...
PMID:Effects of nifedipine and diltiazem on myocardial ischemia in patients with severe stable angina pectoris treated with nitrates and beta-blockers. 128 86
The beneficial effects of calcium-channel blockers against myocardial stunning have been tested in experimental studies, showing that, when added before or during
ischemia
, a protective effect against postischemia stunning is achieved. The present study was undertaken to test and compare the protective effect of calcium antagonists [nisoldipine (NIS) and nifedipine (NIF)] and nitrates (NIT) against myocardial stunning in patients with coronary artery disease undergoing percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) with prolonged inflation as PTCA represents a model of induced acute and severe
ischemia
for a brief period and might cause myocardial stunning. The study included 30 patients between the ages of 42 and 67 years, all with exercise-induced
angina
and single-vessel disease, with severe stenosis (80% to subtotal occlusion) localized on the left anterior descending artery and with the absence of collaterals on the coronary angiograms. Moreover, all patients had normal left ventricular (LV) overall function, as well as normal systolic thickening of the anterior wall, supplied by the diseased artery. Patients were randomized to a pre-PTCA treatment with NIT, 80-120 mg/day (10 patients), NIF, 40-60 mg/day (10 patients), and NIS, 10-20 mg/day (10 patients). Pre-PTCA treatment was initiated 7 days before the procedure and continued after. During the PTCA, at the first balloon inflation, an additional dose of 300 micrograms of NIT was injected into the left anterior descending artery through the balloon catheter in the patients in the NIT group, as well as 0.2 mg of NIF in NIF group patients and 0.05 mg of NIS in NIS group patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Myocardial stunning following coronary angioplasty: protective effects of calcium-channel blockers. 128 9
Coronary heart disease is the most frequent cause of death in Western, industrialized countries. Coronary risk factors are prevalent in such countries and sometimes combine to constitute the so-called syndrome X--hypertension, central obesity, serum lipid and clotting disturbances, and insulin resistance. beta-Blockers, unlike calcium antagonists, have proved highly effective in secondary prevention of myocardial infarction. If present at the time of the myocardial infarction, beta-blockers (unlike calcium antagonists and diuretics) probably decrease mortality 1 month later. Early intervention (within 12 h) of chest pain with intravenous beta-blockers results in a 15% reduction in cardiovascular mortality at 1 week. Later intervention (3-28 days) with oral non-ISA beta-blockers results in a 30% reduction in mortality after 1 year; ISA-containing beta-blockers are probably less effective (less decrease in heart rate). Hydrophilicity/lipophilicity of beta-blockers is unimportant in terms of decreased mortality. Primary prevention of myocardial infarction, unlike stroke, in hypertensive patients has been disappointing, possibly due to treatment-induced biochemical/lipid changes or inappropriate lowering of diastolic blood pressure in high-risk subjects (J-curve effect). beta-Blockers should be first-line therapy for hypertensive patients up to the age of 65 years, particularly men (and nonsmokers) as Q-wave myocardial infarction is significantly decreased by beta-blockers and significantly increased by diuretics. However, in elderly hypertensive subjects, beta-blockers have not significantly decreased myocardial infarction (unlike stroke), whereas diuretics have. The effects of beta-blockers and diuretics on heart size (and thus coronary flow reserve) in the elderly may be important. Thus, beta-blockers should be second-line therapy for the elderly hypertensive individual but first-line if overt
ischemia
(e.g.,
angina
or recent myocardial infarction) also is present. In patients with
angina
but normal blood pressure, beta-blockers tend to decrease and calcium antagonists increase cardiovascular events. Thus, beta-blockers are highly effective agents in the secondary prevention of myocardial infarction and are moderately effective in primary prevention of myocardial infarction in hypertensive patients (particularly men) under the age of 65 years.
...
PMID:Beta-blockers: primary and secondary prevention. 128 45
Calcium-antagonist drugs are therapeutic agents of first choice in patients with coronary artery disease. We have reviewed a number of clinical trials in which the safety and efficacy of calcium blockers have been tested and discuss the established clinical effects of these compounds, which range from relief of
angina
and improved quality of life (both in patients with
ischemia
due to reduction in coronary flow and in patients with
ischemia
due to increased O2 demand) to a favorable effect on the course of coronary atherosclerosis and, finally, (at least for some of these agents) to an improvement in prognosis.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of calcium-antagonist drugs. 128 60
Considerable advances have been seen in recent years in the diagnostic and therapeutic management of myocardial infarction. Furthermore, approximately 50% of patients hospitalised for a myocardial infarction have shown no evidence of any complication by the 3rd day of the disease. With this in mind, the authors show that early discharge from hospital at the end of the first week is possible in perfect safety for the majority of these patients, most often treated by thrombolysis, based upon precise knowledge of the severity of arterial disease and of left ventricular function, and the detection of any residual
ischemia
or possible rhythm disturbances. Only patients with three vessel disease have a higher risk of residual
angina
and should theoretically be excluded from such programmes. Ambulatory rehabilitation is an essential adjuvant, contributing to a faster return to work and a decrease in health care costs.
...
PMID:[Early hospital discharge after uncomplicated myocardial infarction: strategies]. 128 22
The clinical implications of isolated late recovery ST depression were tested in patients with scintigraphically defined
ischemia
(coronary artery disease [CAD], n = 18) compared with patients without
ischemia
(n = 25). Spontaneous (78.4 versus 12.0%, P < 0.008) and exercise-induced
angina
(44.4 versus 0%, P < 0.0001) were more frequently seen in patients with CAD. Histories of unstable angina (33.3%), prior myocardial infarction (27.8%), ST elevated
angina
(22.2%) and significant stenosis in the left anterior descending artery (17 of 18, 94.4%) were almost exclusively seen in the CAD group. There was no significant difference between the two groups in capacity for exercise, maximum deviation of ST level or TV2 amplitude. Balloon angioplasty abolished late recovery ST changes in 63.6% of CAD patients. These results suggest that isolated late recovery ST depression, when accompanied with typical chest pain, may be considered as an indicator of myocardial ischemia, but this phenomenon is difficult to distinguish electrocardiographically.
...
PMID:Isolated post exercise delayed ST depression as a sign of severe ischemia: the influence of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. 128 36
Arterial hypertension is the most frequent cause of a disturbance of coronary microcirculation. Inspite of having normal epicardial coronary arteries, patients with arterial hypertension often have symptoms of
angina pectoris
and a positive exercise tolerance test. The
angina pectoris
symptoms in patients with arterial hypertension are due to functional and structural alterations of the coronary microcirculation. Consequently, an antihypertensive therapy should not only aim at lowering blood pressure and reversing myocardial hypertrophy, but also to improve coronary microcirculation in order to avoid the consequences of chronic
ischemia
on the myocardium. Until now, only experimental studies have indicated that antihypertensive therapy can improve coronary flow reserve. To determine (also under clinical conditions) if coronary flow reserve can be improved, in 30 hypertensive patients maximal coronary blood flow, minimal coronary resistance, and coronary reserve (dipyridamol) were studied before and after a long-term antihypertensive treatment (9-12 months) with an ACE-inhibitor (enalapril 10-20 mg/d), a calcium channel blocker (diltiazem 120-180 mg/d) and a beta 1-selective beta-receptor-blocker (bisoprolol 5-10 mg/d). To assess the chronic effects rather than the acute effects of the antihypertensive pharmacon, coronary microcirculation was studied after intermission of medical therapy for a period of 1 week. Along with a comparable decrease in LV muscle mass, coronary reserve was improved after enalapril by 48%, after diltiazem by 48%, and after bisoprolol by 22%. It is possible that the observed increase in coronary reserve is related to the reversal of structural vascular abnormalities on the level of the coronary microcirculation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Prevention with vasoactive drugs]. 129 Feb 99
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