Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0151814 (
coronary occlusion
)
3,687
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From a study of 34 cases, the authors have tried to define the characteristic features of this very specialised type of coronary artery disease. From the clinical standpoint, if the common combination of uncontrolled angina and a past history of myocardial infarction are taken as representative, the basal ECG can in no way differentiate the diagnosis; on the other hand tests on the bicycle ergometer appear to have a good indicative value. Coronary arteriography shows the sharply isolated character of the stenosis of the trunk which is part of the picture of diffuse coronary disease, and the frequency (2 cases out of 3) of total
coronary occlusion
. The haemodynamic findings are even more variable and unpredictable, and bear no relationship to the degree of trunk stenosis, to the index of the lesion, and to the number of occlusions. However, joint analysis of the index of the lesion and of the degree to which the coronary circulation is compensated or de-compensated allows a better interpretation of the haemodynamic picture.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1977 Nov
PMID:[Stenosis of the trunk of the left coronary artery. Contribution of coronary arteriography and hemodynamic correlations. Apropos of 34 cases]. 41 68
This clinical study analysed the changes in right ventricular ejection fraction induced by changes in right ventricular afterload using a new thermodilution catheter linked to a rapid response computer which allowed instantaneous measurements of the right ventricular ejection fraction. The first group comprised 16 patients referred for coronary angioplasty with single vessel disease (isolated proximal stenosis of one of the two main branches of the left coronary artery) and a normal left ventricular ejection fraction (> or = 55%) and mean pulmonary artery pressure of < 25 mmHg: right ventricular ejection fraction and mean pulmonary artery pressure were measured under basal conditions and after 60 seconds'
coronary occlusion
with the balloon catheter in order to assess the effects of the reactional increase in afterload on the right ventricular ejection fraction. The second group comprised 11 patients with dilated primary cardiomyopathy with decreased left ventricular ejection fraction (< 50%) and mean pulmonary artery pressure > or = 25 mmHg: the right ventricular ejection fraction and mean pulmonary artery pressure were measured under basal conditions and after intravenous trinitrin (performed to evaluate the pulmonary reaction to vasodilators) in order to analyse the effects of the reduction of afterload on right ventricular ejection fraction. Negative linear correlations were observed between the right ventricular ejection fraction and mean pulmonary artery pressure under basal conditions (r = -0.72; p < 0.005) and between the right ventricular ejection fraction and mean pulmonary artery pressure after changing the conditions of afterload (r = -0.82; p < 0.005).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1992 Sep
PMID:[Relationship between right ventricular ejection fraction and pulmonary pressure in man]. 129 Mar 91
One of the problems of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty is acute occlusion during the procedure, the main cause of serious complications and emergency coronary bypass surgery. Acute occlusion is generally related to severe intimal dissection and/or thrombosis. In animal experiments, it is possible to treat intimal dissection and dessicate thrombi by balloon laser angioplasty. Using this method, a programmed laser energy may be delivered to the arterial wall via a fiber optic system linked to a Nd:Yag laser during classical balloon inflation. This has been proposed for the treatment of acute
coronary occlusion
. Between September 1989 and August 1990, 923 patients underwent coronary angioplasty at the Centre Cardiologique du Nord. Peroperative acute occlusions occurred 52 times (3.9%) in 52 patients. Sixteen patients who were "candidates" for emergency coronary bypass surgery (residual stenosis > or = 75%; delayed flow; myocardial ischaemia) were treated by laser balloon angioplasty, 14 with success (87%). Two patients had to be operated as an emergency. There were no hospital deaths. The average follow-up was 4.7 months for the 14 non-operated patients. Systematic control coronary angiography was refused by 2 asymptomatic patients. In the other 12 patients investigated 1 to 17 months after the procedure, there were 10 restenoses (76%), 6 of which were treated by repeat angioplasty and 3 by coronary bypass surgery. These results show that balloon laser angioplasty is very effective in the treatment of peroperative acute occlusions, enabling emergency coronary bypass surgery to be avoided in 87% of cases, but it is associated with a very high restenosis rate which is difficult to accept.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1992 Nov
PMID:[Value and limits of balloon laser-assisted angioplasty in the treatment of acute obstruction during percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty]. 130 Sep 54
Acute myocardial infarction is the result of sudden
coronary occlusion
in the absence of a collateral circulation. There main factors are required for this to occur: an acute parietal lesion on a stenosis of variable, sometimes minor, importance; local coronary vasoconstriction and a platelet and fibrin thrombus. Parietal fissuration is the commonest "trigger" of coronary spasm and the thrombotic cascade. All factors of
coronary occlusion
are potentially reversible--vasodilation--platelet anti-aggregation--physiological fibrinolysis--remodeling and cicatrisation of the plaque, thereby explaining cases of spontaneous regression of occlusion (10% at 1 hour; 20% at 6 hours; 30% at 24 hours; 50 to 70% at 1 year). The pathogenesis of myocardial infarction with angiographically normal coronary arteries may be reviewed and attributed to acute parietal fissuration at a non-significant or angiographically undetectable plaque resulting in occlusive thrombosis. In this case, the role of other pathogenic factors is also discussed (diabetes, oral contraception, haemostatic abnormalities, platelet disorders...).
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1992 May
PMID:[Acute myocardial infarction: recent physiopathological data. 1: acute coronary occlusion]. 153 Apr 7
Myocardial infarction is an anatomical and therefore functional amputation of some of the myocardial tissues. Moments after acute
coronary occlusion
, a cascade of metabolic, mechanical and electrical ischaemia related events is observed. Contraction stops and regional left ventricular akinesis (then dyskinesis) occurs in the zone at risk of irreversible myocardial damage. This is partially compensated by hyperkinetic motion of non-ischaemic myocardium. The degree of alteration of the global ejection fraction is the resultant of these akinetic and hyperkinetic wall motions. It is lower in cases of anterior myocardial infarction, of occlusion of the proximal segment of the left anterior descending artery and of multivessel disease. Its eventual outcome depends on coronary blood flow. If the artery responsible is recanalized early, the global ejection fraction stabilises or improves. When this does not happen, the global ejection fraction decreases. The end-diastolic volume, an indicator of left ventricular remodeling, increases in relation to the size of the infarct and to the persistence of coronary artery occlusion. The delay before the appearance of the first irreversible lesions, the rate of their propagation within the myocardial wall and the presence of reperfusion lesions are poorly understood factors in the clinical setting and influence the efficacy of methods of myocardial protection.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1992 May
PMID:[Acute myocardial infarction: recent physiopathological data. 2: Left ventricular function]. 153 Apr 8
Myocardial infarction (MI) is the result of acute
coronary occlusion
and the prognosis depends on the infarct size. In experimental studies, infarct size is reduced by early coronary reperfusion which may be obtained by intravenous thrombolytic therapy. This simple, rapid and widely used technique is the clinical treatment of choice. The diagnosis of MI must be confirmed by clinical and electrocardiographic findings. The clinical history is important because the value of reperfusion when started after the 6th hour after the onset of chest pain is questionable. However, it is often difficult to determine the beginning of MI when preceded by unstable angina. Contraindications to thrombolytic therapy must be carefully excluded irrespective of the thrombolytic agent because of the risk of haemorrhage. This must be weighed up against the risk of the MI itself. Therefore, age is not a systematic exclusion criterion. The choice of thrombolytic is based on the efficacy, mode of administration and cost. Heparin therapy at effective doses is associated in all cases to prevent reocclusion. Aspirin is given orally. The association of a calcium inhibitor or a betablocker may also be considered. Reperfusion and ischaemia may give rise to arrhythmias and haemodynamic changes which have to be rapidly corrected. Haemorrhagic complications during thrombolysis are treated according to the severity and time of onset by blood transfusion sometimes associated with a plasmin inhibitor. Reocclusion is an indication for emergency coronary angioplasty but in some cases repeat thrombolytic therapy may be beneficial. When the MI is extensive, rapid transfer to a cardiological centre with catheter facilities is advisable.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1992 May
PMID:[Thrombolytic therapy of myocardial infarction: practical management]. 153 Apr 12
The increasing application of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) requires evaluation of emergency coronary artery surgery for complications of this procedure. In a consecutive series of 2,576 angioplasties performed between April 1980 and January 1990, 100 patients (82 men and 18 women, average age 54 +/- 10 years, 3.9%) underwent emergency coronary artery surgery because of complications. The artery involved was the left anterior descending artery in 81% of cases. The causal lesion was a dissection and/or thrombus in 95% of cases; 85% of patients were referred for surgery with acute myocardial infarction. The average delay before surgery was 110 +/- 15 minutes (interval between
coronary occlusion
and starting cardiopulmonary bypass) and 155 coronary grafts were implanted (1.5 per patient). The hospital mortality was 19%; the infarction rate was 57%. The left ventricular ejection fraction decreased from 63 +/- 10% (preoperatively) to 52 +/- 9% (postoperatively), p less than 0.001. Hospital mortality was significantly related to three factors, old age, unstable angina before PTCA, and cardiogenic shock or the necessity for external cardiac massage. In the subgroup of patients developing cardiogenic shock (n = 7) or requiring external cardiac massage during transfer to the operating theatre (n = 16) the mortality was 44%. Among the 81 survivors, the global 7 year survival rate was 96% (Kaplan-Meier) with 3 cardiac deaths, 2 other patients developing myocardial infarction and 4 undergoing repeat angioplasty. After an average follow-up of 55 +/- 38 months, 80% of patients are asymptomatic, 34% have no antianginal drugs and 73% of those who were previously employed have returned to work.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1992 Jan
PMID:[Emergency coronary surgery after transluminal angioplasty. Immediate results and long-term outcome of 100 operations]. 155 Apr 31
Delayed or late potentials after myocardial infarction is a marker of the risk of severe ventricular arrhythmias. We looked for the factors favorising the appearance of these potentials in 208 consecutive patients (172 men, 36 women) admitted to hospital for primary myocardial infarction. Coronary angiography, evaluation of the left ventricular ejection fraction and signal averaged electrocardiography were performed in all patients who were then divided into two groups (Group I: patients with delayed potentials; Group II: patients without delayed potentials). A multivariate analysis of 7 different clinical and paraclinical parameters possibly related to delayed potentials was undertaken. The overall incidence of delayed potentials was 20%. The coronary artery responsible for the infarct was occluded in 79% of patients in Group I and 31% of patients in Group II (p less than 0.00009). The left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly lower in Group I (45.9% vs 54.5%, p less than 0.0002). The incidence of anterior infarcts was 58% in Group I and 37% in Group II (p = 0.008). These 3 factors were independent and correlated with the presence of delayed potentials. The multivariate analysis showed that the major factor was
coronary occlusion
with presence of delayed potentials multiplied by 6.3, whereas anterior infarction multiplied the risk of delayed potentials by 2.6 and each 10% decrease in LV ejection fraction increased the risk by 1.4.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1991 Apr
PMID:[Factors influencing the occurrence of delayed potentials after myocardial infarction. A multivariate study]. 206 11
The aim of this study was to assess the immediate efficacy and the medium-term risks and results of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) in early post-infarction unstable angina. Thirty-six patients were included for a series of 248 consecutive PTCA procedures performed between December 1985 and January 1989. The average age was 56 years (range 35 to 84 years). The initial infarct was anterior (N = 16), inferior (N = 15), lateral (N = 5), without a Q wave (N = 22), transmural (N = 14) and treated by thrombolysis in 42 p. 100 of cases. The interval between initial infarction and PTCA was 16 +/- 3 days. A primary success was obtained in 33 cases (92%). One patient died of electromechanical dissociation at the beginning of the procedure. Two infarcts occurred due to acute coronary occlusions. None of the patients required emergency coronary bypass surgery. The specific risk of PTCA in early post-infarction unstable angina is acute
coronary occlusion
. This complication was observed in 9 patients (25%) and it required immediate repeat PTCA, associated with thrombolytic therapy in four cases.
Coronary occlusion
was more common in patients with transmural infarcts than in those without Q-waves (43% vs 14%; p less than 0.01) and in patients treated initially by thrombolysis compared with those not treated by thrombolysis (40% vs 15%; p less than 0.05). No fatalities or reinfarctions occurred during follow-up (average 9 +/- 8 months, range 2 to 35 months). A good clinical result was maintained in 71 per cent of patients treated by PTCA alone. Seven repeat PTCA procedures and 3 coronary bypass operations were performed during follow-up.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1990 Mar
PMID:[Initial and mid-term results of coronary angioplasty in early post-infarction unstable angina]. 210 25
The aim of this retrospective study was to determine the relationship between the duration of preceding angina pectoris, collateral circulation and left ventricular function after isolated
coronary occlusion
with or without myocardial infarction. Coronary angiography of 138 consecutive patients showed isolated and complete occlusions of the left anterior descending (58 patients) or right coronary artery (80 patients). One hundred and four patients had myocardial infarction with (Group A, n = 21) or without (Group B, n = 83) preceding angina pectoris and 34 had angina without myocardial infarction (Group C). The left ventricular ejection fraction was measured by ventriculography in the 30 degrees right anterior oblique projection. The collateral circulation was assessed by coronary angiography and evaluated as follows: no flow or flow limited to collateral branches (subgroup 1) and partial or complete filling of the epicardial arterial segment (subgroup 2). In the global population the left ventricular ejection fraction was higher and the duration of preceding angina pectoris was longer in the subgroups with a well developed collateral circulation. There was no difference in ejection fraction between Groups A and B (presence of myocardial infarction), on the other hand, within each of the groups, a good collateral circulation (subgroup 2) was associated with a significantly higher ejection fraction. Group C (without infarction) patients had better ejection fractions than Groups A or B, especially when the collateral circulation was poorly developed. Within Group C, the quality of the collateral circulation did not seem to affect the ejection fraction. The left ventricular ejection fraction is lower in patients with isolated
coronary occlusion
and myocardial infarction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1990 Oct
PMID:[Relations of the duration of pre-existing angina pectoris, collateral circulation and left ventricular function after isolated coronary occlusion with or without myocardial infarction]. 212 45
1
2
3
4
Next >>