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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (
myocardial ischemia
)
31,282
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ventriculograms made 9-15 months after surgery in 48 patients with normal preoperative apical contraction were reviewed to determine the influence of apical venting on apical wall motion in patients undergoing coronary bypass surgery. After interpretation of postoperative apical wall motion, the patients were subdivided into two groups. One group consisted of 34 patients who were vented by inserting a catheter through the apex of the left ventricle and the second group included 14 patients in whom no transventricular vent was made. The two groups were similar clinically and hemodynamically before surgery, and the surgical procedures were similar with the exception of vent site. Following surgery, incidences of graft patency and antegrade flow to the apex were also similar. Nineteen (56%) patients in the apically vented group had apical dyskinesia or
akinesia
observed on the postoperative ventriculogram while none of the patients who were not apically vented had these findings. None of the patients with apical dyskinesia or
akinesia
had congestive heart failure following surgery. The postoperative ventriculograms of 12 patients with mitral stenosis who underwent valvulotomy by inserting a Tubbs dilator through the apex were also analyzed. Only one patient (8.5%) had apical dyskinesia or
akinesia
. Since the patients with mitral stenosis probably did not have significant coronary artery disease, it is possible that the combination of the apical vent and
ischemic heart disease
was responsible for the focal contraction abnormalities observed.
...
PMID:Ventricular apical vents and postoperative focal contraction abnormalities in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery. 30 45
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
Emergency aortic valve replacement with double aorto-coronary bypass surgery was performed to treat severe intractable congestive heart failure in an 82-year-old man. Mild circumflex and left anterior descending artery lesions were present and the pressure gradient across the aortic valve was 80 mmHg despite a low cardiac output. The preoperative anteroseptal
akinesia
seen by two-dimensional echocardiography was normalized after surgery. Thus, even in patients with segmental left ventricular dysfunction, tight aortic stenosis might be present when concomitant mild
ischemic heart disease
is present.
...
PMID:Segmental asynergy of the left ventricle in a case of tight aortic stenosis associated with mild ischemic heart disease. 143 18
Thirty-one patients, mean age 54 years, had been on chronic ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) for an average of 38 months. Mean values (mg/dl) for triglycerides (567), total-C (267), LDL-C (133), and Apo-B (154) were elevated, and HDL-C (30) were low. The low values for total-C/Apo-B and LDL-C/Apo-B suggest an increase in the number of low density lipoprotein (LDL) particles, rather than in the amount of cholesterol per LDL particle. Without knowledge of lipids,
ischemic heart disease
for the 31 patients was categorized into five grades in the following manner. All patients were graded based on history (angina, myocardial infarction, and bypass surgery), electrocardiogram (EKG), and echocardiography. In addition, five patients underwent coronary angiography, the results of which were considered in their grading. The five grades were assigned as follows: Grade I, no evidence (n = 15); Grade II, angina with EKG ischemia (n = 4); Grade III, myocardial infarction (MI) (n = 1); Grade IV, MI with dyskinesia-
akinesia
on echo (n = 4); Grade V, severe three vessel disease on angiography, or multiple infarcts, or Grade IV with heart failure (n = 7). Only Apo-B (r = 0.56) and total-C/HDL-C (r = 0.57) correlated with severity of grade, with p less than 0.001. When patients with and without detectable
ischemic heart disease
were compared by stepwise logistic regression, Apo-B was the only variable that independently predicted heart disease (p = 0.001). However, contribution of the lipid changes induced by CAPD has not been established.
...
PMID:Ischemic heart disease, serum cholesterol, and apolipoproteins in CAPD. 175 Dec 58
Myocardial perfusion was studied in 21 patients before and after revascularization of all graftable stenotic vessels following post-infarction anteroapical
akinesia
and minor dyskinesia. At preoperative and late postoperative evaluation, perfusion abnormalities in identified sectors were quantified with two methods, one (Q1) assessing the extent and the other (Q3) the severity of abnormal perfusion. The preoperative scores with both methods indicated permanent myocardial perfusion defects in all 21 patients and reversible defects, indicating
myocardial ischemia
, in 16 with Q1 and 14 with Q3. After bypass grafting there was overall reduction of myocardial perfusion defect and of abnormality scores: Notably, 13/21 patients (62%) had decreased permanent myocardial defect score, reflecting reactivation of 'hibernating myocardium'. The findings indicated that obstructed but graftable vessels supplying myocardium with loss of contractile function should be bypassed, since flow contribution to distant, viable myocardium is probable via preserved collateral circulation. This should be particularly relevant for the LAD, because of that artery's septal branches.
...
PMID:Revascularization of infarcted myocardium. Effect on myocardial perfusion assessed with quantified Tl-201 SPECT technique. 206 61
A 37 year old man without coronary risk factors or known heart disease showed progression of Hodgkin's disease after radiation and multiple chemotherapy. One day after the first cycle of chemotherapy with methotrexate, Ifosfamide and etoposide, he had an acute
myocardial ischemia
. The creatinin-kinase was elevated up to 325 U/l. Coronary angiography showed a thrombus in the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), while the other coronary arteries were normal. Ventriculography showed an apical
akinesia
. After 7 days of treatment with heparin coronary angiogram was normalized, without any stenosis in the LAD. To our knowledge this is the first documented case of a coronary artery thrombosis and
myocardial ischemia
after chemotherapy in a patient without coronary heart disease. We conclude that chemotherapy can cause
myocardial ischemia
by coronary artery thrombosis in patients without prior heart disease.
...
PMID:[Acute coronary thrombosis and myocardial ischemia following chemotherapy of Hodgkin's disease]. 220 11
A case of a 60-year-old woman suffering from hypertension, who presented an episode of acute
myocardial ischemia
with an elevation of the ST segment in the anterior ECG lead, is reported. On examination, a transient loud systolic murmur was present; it completely disappeared soon after the cessation of acute
myocardial ischemia
. Doppler echocardiography was performed a few times, during and after the acute ischemia: it was able to show a sort of "hour-glass" deformation of the left ventricle due to the
akinesia
of the anterior and apical segments. This functional anatomic deformation hampers the outflow from the left ventricle thus creating a dynamic left intraventricular gradient, which is clearly shown by pulsed wave and continuous Doppler echocardiography.
...
PMID:[Dynamic left intraventricular obstruction in acute myocardial ischemia]. 260 82
Balloon occlusion of a stenotic coronary artery during percutaneous coronary artery angioplasty provides a unique opportunity to study the effect of acute
myocardial ischemia
on left ventricular (LV) function. Simultaneous M-mode and 2-dimensional (2-D) echocardiograms and a 6-lead electrocardiogram were recorded during 20 episodes of coronary artery occlusion and release in 12 patients. No patient had previous myocardial infarction and all had normal LV function by angiography. All patients had isolated single coronary artery disease, with left anterior descending stenosis in 8 and right coronary stenosis in 4. In 18 of 20 episodes (90%), M-mode echocardiography during balloon occlusion revealed a significant (p less than 0.001) decrease in LV systolic, diastolic and percent systolic wall thickness; systolic excursion; systolic and diastolic endocardial velocities; and fractional shortening. These changes were observed in the area of the ventricular septum in patients with left anterior descending occlusion and posteroinferior wall in those with right coronary artery occlusion. Two-dimensional echocardiography revealed varying degrees of hypokinesia,
akinesia
and dyskinesia during balloon occlusion in 18 instances. The echocardiographic changes were observed within 15 to 20 seconds of balloon occlusion and resolved 10 to 20 seconds after balloon deflation. All patients who had echocardiographic changes during balloon occlusion also had concomitant electrocardiographic (ECG) ST-segment elevation, whereas 2 patients with normal LV function had no ECG changes. Both of these patients had profuse collateral blood supply to the stenotic coronary artery. The echocardiographic and ECG abnormalities increased proportionately to the length of balloon occlusion. This study confirms previous animal and recent human studies of transient LV dysfunction during coronary occlusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Echocardiographic evaluation of left ventricular function during coronary artery angioplasty. 293 68
The direct manipulation of coronary blood flow to induce regional
myocardial ischemia
has been almost entirely limited to experimental animal models. Thus, the detection of ischemia-induced left ventricular dysfunction in human subjects has been generally limited to observations made under conditions of diagnostic loading or during spontaneous clinical events. Percutaneous coronary angioplasty requires repeated interruptions of coronary blood flow for periods as long as 1 minute. The resulting appearance of or increase in ischemia-produced changes in myocardial function were detected by two-dimensional echocardiography in 18 patients undergoing angioplasty of 22 coronary stenoses. Accordingly, left ventricular contraction was studied during 52 episodes of regional coronary blood flow interruption and reperfusion in the process of inflating and deflating the angioplasty balloon. Before angioplasty, left ventricular wall motion was normal in 14 patients. There was mild anteroapical hypokinesia in two patients, anteroapical
akinesia
in one and mild inferior hypokinesia in one. Balloon inflations repeatedly produced new or increased wall motion abnormalities in the distribution of the instrumented coronary artery in 19 (86.4%) of the 22 procedures, but did not alter wall motion during angioplasty of one left circumflex artery lesion, one highly collateralized left anterior descending artery stenosis and one left anterior descending stenosis that had already caused severe anteroapical dyssynergy. Hypokinesia, usually rapidly progressing to dyskinesia, began 19 +/- 8 seconds (mean +/- SD) after coronary occlusion. Wall motion began to normalize 17 +/- 8 seconds after reperfusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Sequence of mechanical, electrocardiographic and clinical effects of repeated coronary artery occlusion in human beings: echocardiographic observations during coronary angioplasty. 315 58
Biplane 30-degree RAO and 60-degree LAO RV selective cineangiography was performed in 21 patients with significant ventricular arrhythmias (ventricular tachycardia in 14, salvos in three, and complex PVCs in seven) and a high presumption of arrhythmogenic RV dysplasia (ARVD), and in a control group of 10 presumed normal individuals. Comparing the two series revealed the lack of specificity of some angiographic images usually reported as suggestive signs of ARVD, such as slow dye evacuation of RV during the levophase and deep fissuring in the anterior wall with a "pile of plates" image. Inversely, localized morphologic and contraction abnormalities in the RV free wall were more sensitive and specific signs for diagnosis of ARVD; these were localized akinetic or dyskinetic bulges sometimes giving a true image of aneurysm (90%), wide and deep fissuring of the apex or of the inferior wall (33%), and large areas of
akinesia
. By order of frequency, these abnormalities were found on the apex in 71%, on the inferior wall in 52%, on the anterior wall in 48%, in the subtricuspid area in 38%, and on the pulmonary infundibulum in 33%. These localized lesions can suffice for the diagnosis of RV dysplasia in the absence of associated pathologies, such as
ischemic heart disease
or congenital defects. Usually a global RV systolic dysfunction is associated in ARVD, as confirmed by greater RV volumes (134 +/- 26 vs 79 +/- 10 ml/m2 for RVEDV, p less than 0.001; 76 +/- 34 vs 32 +/- 6 ml/m2 for RVESV, p less than 0.001), and lower RV ejection fraction (58 +/- 18% vs 47 +/- 8%, p less than 0.001) in the ARVD group compared to controls. Nevertheless, normal RV volumes and ejection fraction can be observed in some localized forms with mono- or bisegmental lesions in which RV systolic dysfunction is absent or moderate, and extensive forms with multiple segmental lesions where RV systolic dysfunction is constant and often severe. Six out of 21 patients in the ARVD group exhibited obvious global or segmental LV dysfunction, indicating the possibility of biventricular forms, as previously reported in other publications.
...
PMID:Critical analysis of cineangiographic criteria for diagnosis of arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia. 334 Nov 80
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