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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (
myocardial ischemia
)
31,282
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The role of hypertension in cardiovascular disease was studied in the hypertensive coarcted monkey during the feeding of an atherogenic and nonatherogenic diet. During the 15-month period of observation, half of the hypertensive coarcted monkeys developed cardiovascular disease which included heart failure,
ischemic heart disease
, stroke, and sudden death. There were no cardiovascular complications in the control normotensive monkeys except for one cholesterol-fed animal. The incidence of
ischemic heart disease
and sudden cardiac death was higher in monkeys with both hypertension and hypercholesterolemia than in those with hypertension or hypercholesterolemia alone. Postmortem studies revealed that the former monkeys had both hypertensive and atherosclerotic heart disease, whereas the monkeys with hypertension or hypercholesterolemia had either hypertensive or atherosclerotic heart disease. Hypertensive heart disease was characterized not only by hypertrophy of the left ventricle but also by focal myocardial degeneration and fibrosis and by focal thickening and narrowing of the small coronary arteries, particularly the sinus node artery and the atrioventricular node artery. The finding of transmural myocardial infarction in two monkeys with patient coronary arteries suggests a possible role of
coronary artery spasm
in
ischemic heart disease
in hypertension. The cerebral vascular complications of hypertension included hypertensive encephalopathy, transient "ischemic" attacks, and hemorrhagic stroke. The complications were associated with severe hypertension and with hypertensive vascular disease or hypertensive and atherosclerotic vascular disease of the cerebral arteries.
...
PMID:Role of hypertension in ischemic heart disease and cerebral vascular disease in the cynomolgus monkey with coarctation of the aorta. 14 28
Primary prevention of death from
ischemic heart disease
requires further understanding of the pathogenesis of this disorder. Cellular defects of cholesterol metabolism may be more significant markers that serum lipid levels for the identification and treatment of atherosclerotic risk.
Coronary spasm
has been shown to be an important cause of ischemia in the presence and absence of atherosclerotic lesions. Careful manipulation of physiologic variables with vasodilator agents during cardiopulmonary bypass can substantially alter the myocardial oxygen supply-demand relation, thereby minimizing ischemic injury. The cellular basis for loss of mechanical function during ischemia and the factors that determine irreversible injury are yet unknown.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of myocardial infarction. 19 8
Coronary artery spasm
is an important pathogenetic mechanism in some forms of myocardial ischemic disease. Factors that may be important in the genesis of spasm include the autonomic nervous system, prostaglandins, endoperoxides, thromboxanes, and the calcium availability to the contractile apparatus. Spasm results in
myocardial ischemia
with attendant chest pain and electrocardiographic and hemodynamic changes; it is the primary pathogenetic mechanism in Prinzmetal's variant angina and has been found in association with classic angina pectoris and acute myocardial infarction. Diagnosis of
coronary artery spasm
is firmly made only by coronary angiography. Treatment includes the use of both short- and long-acting nitrates and the slow-channel blocking agents such as verapamil, nifedipine, and perhexiline.
...
PMID:Coronary artery spasm. 38 40
Coronary artery spasm
was induced by intravascular administration of ergonovine maleate (Ergotrate) during cardiac catheterization. In 78 patients suspected to have Prinzmetal's angina, no morbidity or death has resulted despite complete occlusive spasm in two and three coronary arteries. Typical EKG changes and akinesia of the myocardium in the distribution of the occluded vessels documented functional
myocardial ischemia
during spasm. The occlusive spasm is readily reversed by sublingual or intravascular nitroglycerin, and ventricular contractility returns to normal following relief of spasm. Occlusive spasm has been demonstrated in 15 patients with clinical evidence of Prinzmetal's angina. Symptoms have been effectively relieved by coronary vasodilators in 10 patients. Of the 5 patients in whom medical therapy failed, 4 were treated surgically. These 4 patients were in the intensive care unit with protracted, prolonged pain, subendocardial infarctions, and persistent failure of coronary vasodilators. Aorta-coronary bypass grafts have been combined with total cardiac denervation by autotransplantation (one patient) and total cardiac denervation by stripping of the great vessels (3 patients). Two of the patients treated by cardiac denervation died in the early postoperative period. The patient treated by autotransplantation has total relief of symptoms but persistent spasm on angiography. The angiographic demonstration of occlusive coronary spasm remains a valuable diagnostic tool to document definitively the presence of spasm. The surgical results question the value of surgical intervention in this disease.
...
PMID:Coronary artery spasm. medical management, surgical denervation, and autotransplantation. 40 7
The role of
coronary artery spasm
in the production of
myocardial ischemia
has recently become the focus of increased attention. This phenomenon is now well established as a causative mechanism underlying the resting chest pain attacks in Prinzmetal's variant angina. There is also evidence that coronary spasm may play a more significant role in the broad spectrum of
ischemic heart disease
than can be documented by current techniques. The autonomous nervous system constitutes a major element in the pathophysiology of spasm. Coronary arteriography, in spite of important limitations, remains the only technique for final documentation of this phenomenon, but radionuclide scintigraphy appears to be promising. Nitroglycerin is effective for the relief of the acute attack, while long acting nitrates and the calcium antagonists: nifedipine, perhexiline and verapamil are useful in the prevention of recurrences.
...
PMID:Coronary artery spasm: its role in the pathogenesis of myocardial ischemia. 50 1
3 patients with different clinical and electrocardiographic manifestations of
coronary artery spasm
are discussed. All 3 patients had anginal attacks at rest. In addition, 2 of these patients, who did not have significant preexisting narrowing of their coronary arteries, also had anginal pain related to exercise. During pain, 1 patient showed ST-segment elevation, the other ST-segment depression, while the third showed ST-segment depression shortly followed by ST-elevation on the electrocardiogram. At coronary angiography, spontaneous or induced spasm of one of the major coronary arteries could be demonstrated in all 3 patients. In 2 cases, sublingual nitroglycerin failed to completely relieve the spasm. This raises the question whether a residual stenosis after NTG conclusively proves a fixed organic narrowing. It is concluded that the clinical spectrum of spasm of the coronary arteries is wider than was originally reported by Prinzmetal and coworkers. Clinical and electrocardiographic manifestations are probably dependent on the site and severity of the spasm, which may cause different degrees of
myocardial ischemia
.
...
PMID:Variant forms of angina pectoris. 71 Apr 90
A 58-year-old woman, referred to our hospital to undergo invasive assessment of mitral valve stenosis, demonstrated prolonged asymptomatic catheter-induced left anterior descending and right
coronary artery spasm
during coronary arteriography. Coronary spasms were not associated with ECG and arterial blood pressure changes. Intracoronary injection of nitroglycerin (300 and 600 micrograms bolus) did not resolve coronary spasm. Coronary angiography, repeated 24 hours later using the same procedure and materials, did not show any evidence of
coronary artery spasm
. The present clinical case is interesting for 3 reasons. First, the presence of prolonged proximal double-vessel coronary spasm not associated with symptoms or signs of acute
myocardial ischemia
; second, the incapacity of high dose of intracoronary nitroglycerin to resolve the coronary spasm; third, the dramatic changes in the sensitivity of coronary artery to mechanical stimulation in different days.
...
PMID:Prolonged asymptomatic catheter-induced left and right coronary artery spasm resistant to high dose of intracoronary nitroglycerin. 129 76
A number of studies have addressed the response to calcium antagonists, used alone or combined with other therapy, in patients with silent
myocardial ischemia
(SMI). Nifedipine, the first calcium antagonist to be studied, was shown to be superior to pindolol in patients with effort angina. Although both nifedipine and diltiazem significantly reduced episodes of ST depression, compared with placebo, in patients with stable effort angina, the addition of nifedipine to diltiazem removed the beneficial effect of diltiazem in another study. Studies have shown a reduced incidence of ischemic episodes during nicardipine treatment in patients with ambulatory ischemia, predominantly SMI, and rest angina due to
coronary artery spasm
. Other workers similarly reported that verapamil was superior to both placebo and propranolol in reducing painful and painless ischemia in patients with angina at rest. It has been demonstrated that, compared with placebo, nifedipine reduced ischemic episodes by 50% and also markedly reduced total ischemic time in totally asymptomatic men with coronary artery disease and SMI. It was suggested that the well-documented increase in SMI occurring between 0600 and 1200 h was reduced, but not eliminated, by nifedipine. Diltiazem may also attenuate the circadian variation in SMI. Nifedipine has been shown to be particularly effective in SMI when combined with a beta-blocker. This has been substantiated in a large group of patients; both drugs reduced the number of episodes of SMI when used as monotherapy, and the combination decreased the incidence by 95%. These findings collectively indicate that calcium antagonists are effective in reducing or preventing SMI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical effects of calcium antagonists in silent ischemia. 136 8
Exposure to cold causes a vasoconstriction and a tachycardia, both resulting in a rise of blood pressure and cardiac work. This last effect may have a deleterious influence on people suffering from
ischaemic heart disease
(
IHD
). Moreover,
coronary artery spasm
could occur if vasoconstriction extends to the heart vessels. Epidemiologic studies have shown that mortality from
IHD
was correlated to the ambient temperature. There will be more deaths per day in the winter, and fewer in the summer. However, the daily number of deaths also increases during the heat waves. During a cold test, the coronary blood flow remains normal or slightly increased in normal subject. There is never a
coronary artery spasm
. Subjects who suffer from angina but have normal coronary arteries behave in the same way as normal subjects. Patients with
IHD
show a decrease in coronary blood flow. In a few cases, those patients may exhibit a coronary spasm with chest pain and even myocardial infarction. It is concluded that people with normal cardiovascular function are unaffected by cold stress whereas those with
IHD
may be crippled, although rarely, by exposure to cold, especially if they perform a physical work.
...
PMID:Cold exposure and ischemic heart disease. 148 67
Coronary artery spasm
plays an important role in
ischemic heart disease
, particularly variant angina. We report the case of a 59-year-old man who developed severe diffuse
coronary artery spasm
11 months after he received a heart transplant. The spasm was reversed by a single dose of sublingual nitroglycerin; however, the patient died 9 days later of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Postmortem examination of this patient's heart revealed accelerated arteriosclerosis, with a prominent diffuse lymphocytic endothelialitis in the coronary arteries. The lymphocytic endothelialitis was characterized by the presence of numerous T lymphocytes and macrophages in the subendothelial space and by histologic changes suggesting injury to the endothelial cells. Although an association does not prove a causal relationship, the findings of accelerated arteriosclerosis and lymphocytic endothelialitis in a patient with
coronary artery spasm
suggests that these processes may be etiologically linked.
...
PMID:Severe lymphocytic endothelialitis associated with coronary artery spasm in a heart transplant recipient. 154 Jun 11
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