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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (
myocardial ischemia
)
31,282
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
One hundred eight consecutive patients with proved coronary artery disease and reproducible exercise-induced
myocardial ischemia
were studied. During repeated exercise testing, 52 patients (Group I) had
myocardial ischemia
in the absence of pain (silent ischemia) whereas 56 patients (Group II) experienced anginal symptoms in the presence of electrocardiographic signs of ischemia. A pulpal test was carried out in all patients using an electrical dental stimulator commonly used in dentistry. Electrical current was delivered in increasing intensity from 10 to 500 mA, and the
dental pain
threshold and the reaction of the patients to maximal stimulation were determined. During the pulpal test, 71.2% of the patients in Group I did not experience pain, even at maximal stimulation (threshold 0), 11.5% were sensitive at threshold I (10 to 200 mA) and 17.3% felt pain at threshold II (210 to 500 mA). In Group II, 69.7% of the patients complained of
dental pain
at the low intensity test current (threshold I), 10.7% at threshold II and 19.6% at threshold 0. In Group I, 71.2% of patients did not have discomfort (reaction -), even at maximal stimulation, 21.1% had a mild reaction (reaction +) and 7.7% had an intense painful reaction (reaction ++). In Group II, 80.4% of patients were sensitive to the pulpar test (67.9% reported intense painful sensation at maximal stimulation, 12.5% had a mild reaction); 19.6% of patients had no reaction. The two groups of patients were similar with respect to age, sex and angiographic features.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Dental pain threshold and angina pectoris in patients with coronary artery disease. 339 25
An association between a decreased responsiveness to varying painful stimuli and arterial hypertension both in animals and in humans has been documented. The relationship between essential hypertension and silent
myocardial ischemia
in coronary artery disease (CAD) populations is not well understood. The aims of this study in CAD patients with and without essential hypertension were (1) to determine
dental pain
threshold and reaction to tooth pulp stimulation and (2) to ascertain whether hypertensive CAD patients differ from normotensive ones in reactivity to pain. This study involved 182 patients who were affected by mild and moderate hypertension (G1) and 174 normotensive patients (G2). The inclusion criteria were reproducible exercise-induced
myocardial ischemia
, CAD documented at angiography, and dental formula suitable for pulp test. All patients underwent an ergometric stress test, coronary angiography, and pulp test. Our CAD hypertensive patients showed a lower prevalence of angina during daily life (64.8% in G1 versus 81.6% in G2, P<.05) and a higher incidence of exercise-induced silent
myocardial ischemia
(60.4% in G1 versus 48.8% in G2, P<.05) than the normotensive group. The mean anginal pain intensity, which was suffered both during spontaneous transitory episodes of ischemia and/or during acute myocardial infarction, was significantly lower in G1 than in G2 patients (P<.05). During pulp test, 31.8% of G1 and 13.7% of G2 referred no symptoms, even at the highest current intensity of 500 mA. The hypertensive patients with symptoms during pulp test had a higher mean
dental pain
threshold and lower mean threshold reaction and maximal reaction than did the normotensive symptomatic ones. In patients of both groups, a positive correlation between the mean maximal reaction during pulp test and the prevalence of angina during daily life was also found. In conclusion, patients with CAD and essential hypertension differ from normotensive CAD patients in reactivity to pain. Significantly higher pain thresholds and lower reactions to tooth pulp stimulation characterized patients with increased blood pressure values.
...
PMID:Susceptibility to pain in hypertensive and normotensive patients with coronary artery disease: response to dental pulp stimulation. 936 88