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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thallium-201 exercise myocardial perfusion scintigraphy, a new, non-invasive screening method, serves to visualize stress-induced ischemic regions and scarred tissue. As compared to the exercise electrocardiogram, the method shows higher sensitivity and specificity in detecting coronary artery disease. Moreover, it makes it possible to localize the predominant defects. Even though myocardial scintigraphy cannot replace coronary arteriography in establishing the precise morphologic situation of the coronary arteries, it is of help in deciding whether an arteriogram should be carried out or not. Thus, important indications for myocardial stress scintigraphy are atypical chest pain and an abnormal electrocardiogram without pain. Furthermore, the method is useful for evaluating patients with uninterpretable electrocardiograms during exercise, and in assessing the outcome of coronary artery bypass surgery.
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PMID:[Thallium 201 myocardial scintigraphy. Clinical use and value]. 31 16

Exercise electrocardiography and rest/exercise myocardial perfusion imaging with thallium-201 were performed in 43 patients with typical angina or atypical chest pain; the results were correlated with those of coronary arteriography. Exercise electrocardiography sensitivity was 65%, specificity was 78%, predictive value for a positive result was 73% and for a negative result was 93%. The low sensitivity of the exercise electrocardiogram was mainly due to the number (13 of 43, 30%) of inconclusive results (no ST-segment change on the electrocardiogram, but failure to attain the target rate), most of which were in the group with typical angina. The predictive value of exercise electrocardiography for both a positive and negative result was excellent in typical angina. In patients with atypical chest pain, the negative predictive value was high (90%) but the positive predictive value was very low (50%). The sensitivity of myocardial perfusion imaging was 71%, specificity was 59%, positive predictive value was 52% and negative predictive value 89%. The low specificity of this test is related to the number of false-positive results obtained, most of which occurred in the group with atypical pain. When the results of exercise electrocardiography and myocardial perfusion imaging are combined, the sensitivity is increased but specificity is unacceptably low. However, myocardial perfusion imaging in patients with an inconclusive result from exercise electrocardiography (most of them in the group with typical angina) showed a sensitivity of 80%, specificity of 88%, positive predictive value of 80% and negative predictive value of 100%.
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PMID:Exercise electrocardiography and myocardial perfusion imaging in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease: preliminary report. 45 62

Treadmill stress testing is used in assessing the condition of patients with known or suspected heart disease. We did a prospective study to clarify physician ordering and integration of the test. Ordering criteria were always complied with, although most tests were ordered for evaluation of atypical chest pain and only a few for high risk patients with known cardiac dysfunction, indicating a misplaced emphasis on the diagnostic capabilities of the test. Tests in patients with atypical chest pain and stress-induced ischemic changes were always integrated, but in 30 percent of patients with atypical pain and no stress-induced electrocardiographic changes, the tests were not used in patient management. This was often due to the misconception that negative findings on a stress test excluded coronary disease. Physicians should be alerted to this misplaced emphasis and misconception.
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PMID:Graded treadmill stress testing. Patterns of physician use and abuse. 61 35

To clarify the association between chest pain and significant coronary artery disease in patients who have aortic valve disease, 76 consecutive candidates for aortic valve replacement were evaluated prospectively with use of a historical questionnaire and coronary arteriography. Of the 76 patients, 19 (25 percent) had no chest pain, 21 (28 percent) had chest pain that was not typical of angina pectoris and 36 (47 percent) had chest pain typical of anigina pectoris. In 18 of 19 patients the absence of chest pain correlated with the absence of coronary artery disease. The single patient without chest pain who had coronary artery disease had evidence of an inferior myocardial infarction in the electrocardiogram. Thus, absence of chest pain and the absence of electrocardiographic evidence of infarction predicted the absence of coronary disease in all cases. The presence of chest pain did not predict the presence of coronary artery disease, but the more typical the pain of angina pectoris the more likely were patients to have significant coronary artery disease. Of the 21 patients with atypical chest pain, 6 (29 percent) had coronary artery disease, but of the 36 patients with typical angina pectoris 23 (64 percent) had significant coronary artery disease. In addition, when patients with chest pain not typical of angina pectoris also had coronary artery disease, the diseased vessels usually supplied smaller areas of the left ventricle than when the pain was typical of angina pectoris. In 21 of 23 patients (91 percent) with typical angina pectoris and significant coronary artery disease, lesions were present in the left coronary artery. There was no systolic pressure gradient across the aortic valve that excluded the presence of coronary artery disease, although all patients with a calculated aortic valve area of less than 0.4 cm2 were free of coronary artery disease. Patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction were more likely to have normal coronary arteries.
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PMID:Chest pain as a predictor of coronary artery disease in patients with obstructive aortic valve disease. 99 22

In 6 patients affected by spontaneous angina with S-T elevation and coronariographic findings of obstruction, intravenous administration of ergonovine maleate determined the same clinical and ECG patterns of spontaneous episodes. The coronary arteriography during pain showed a marked spasm with occlusion of a large coronary vessel in four patients. In 2 patients with atypical chest pain and normal coronariogram, E.M. did not induce pain, ECG abnormality or coronariographic alterations. The role of spasm in spontaneous angina is discussed.
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PMID:[Coronary artery spasm induced by the somministration of ergonovine maleate in subjects with spontaneous angina (author's transl)]. 101 Feb 29

In our department we have reviewed the use of ergonovine maleate as a provocative agent for inducing coronary spasm during coronary arteriography. From January 1978 to December 1991 the test has been performed in 116 patients. According to their symptoms, the patients were divided into 4 groups: (A) patients with exertional angina: 16 patients (13.8%), (B) patients with angina at rest: 64 patients (55.2%), (C) patients with atypical chest pain: 29 patients (25%), and (D) patients with previous myocardial infarct: 7 patients (6%). We have subdivided the patients with angina at rest, according to the electrocardiogram recorded during pain, into: (1) 16 patients with ST-segment elevation; (2) 14 patients with ST-segment depression or T wave inversion; (3) 5 patients with electrocardiogram unchanged during angina; (4) 29 patients with no electrocardiogram recorded during angina. In 67 patients (57.7%) the coronaries were normal, 17 patients (14.6%) had mild irregularities, 26 patients (22.4%) had non critical fixed obstructions (< or = 70%), and in 6 patients (3.5%) there were fixed coronary narrowings > or = 70%. The left ventricle was normal in 85 subjects (73.2%), hypo or akinetic in 31 (26.8%). After routine coronary angiography and ventriculography, ergonovine maleate, 0.05 up to 0.4 mg, was given intravenously. The ergonovine test was considered positive when a focal spasm narrowed a normal coronary artery, or one with a mild fixed obstruction (< or = 50%) to more than 70%, or when a 70% stenosis became occluded. The development of angina and/or electrocardiographic changes were not taken as a criteria of positivity. Thirteen tests (11.2%) were considered positive.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The use of ergonovine in the hemodynamics laboratory]. 129 54

Atypical pain in the chest accounts for many visits to physicians. Possible sources of the pain include the pericardium, the pulmonary system, the aorta, the gastrointestinal tract, the chest wall, the mitral apparatus, and psychogenic factors. Identifying the source primarily involves taking an accurate history and understanding the prevalence of coronary artery disease in various patient populations. Electrocardiography chest films, and stress testing may help identify the source of pain. Cardiac catheterization should be reserved for patients with abnormal findings on non-invasive tests, those with unclear test results, and, rarely, as reassurance for patients with frequent episodes of atypical chest pain or their caregivers.
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PMID:Atypical chest pain. Differentiation from coronary artery disease. 156 Nov 65

I have reported two cases of spontaneous esophageal rupture (Boerhaave's syndrome) in which the patients had atypical chest pain and an unquenchable thirst for cold water in the absence of dehydration. Consumption of cold water appeared to give momentary pain relief. This symptom complex may be a typical early finding in Boerhaave's syndrome. Physicians should be alert to this atypical cause of chest and epigastric pain.
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PMID:Cold water polydipsia: unheralded marker of spontaneous esophageal rupture. 242 16

We studied 111 patients with valvular heart disease in order to detect associated coronary artery disease (CAD). Fifty had aortic valve disease, 47 mitral lesions and 14 mitro-aortic disease. Coronary angiography was performed in all subjects above 50 years of age and in 13 younger subjects with angina, atypical chest pain, prior myocardial infarction or unexplained left ventricular disfunction. Eight subjects (7.2%) had significant CAD: 1 with triple, 2 with double and 5 with single vessel disease. CAD was diagnosed in 11.5% of 26 patients with angina, in 6% of 17 patients with atypical chest pain and in 6% of 68 patients without pain. CAD was present in males only above age 55. We conclude that in our population, with low incidence of CAD, the association of this disease and valvular heart disease is unusual. Coronary arteriography would be unnecessary in these patients except in the presence of marked risk factors or other clinical findings suggesting CAD, like angina or prior myocardial infarction.
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PMID:[Association of coronary disease and valve diseases: implications for coronariography indication]. 251 13

The intraesophageal acid perfusion (Bernstein) test was evaluated as a provocative test for nonspecific chest pain in children with esophagitis. Sixty patients with atypical chest pain were studied. None of the patients had heartburn or other characteristic symptoms of esophagitis. Forty-five patients had esophagitis; in 18 (40%) of these patients, pain replicating their usual symptoms developed during esophageal acid perfusion, whereas in 15 patients without esophagitis, chest pain did not develop during esophageal acid perfusion. In three patients with esophagitis, esophageal manometric abnormalities and chest pain developed as a result of esophageal acid perfusion. Treatment with either ranitidine or antacids had equivalent effectiveness. We conclude that a positive Bernstein test result in children with nonspecific chest pain indicates that the pain is likely associated with esophageal disease.
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PMID:Use of the intraesophageal acid perfusion test in provoking nonspecific chest pain in children. 280 1


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