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28,634 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

71 patients undergo myocardial revascularisation for Prinzmetal's angina; among them, 50 p. cent are operated upon in emergency according to three ways of anaesthesia: neuroleptanalgesia, analgesic anaesthesia, combined anaesthesia. The authors lay stress on the importance of per- and post-operative complications: electrocardiographic ischemia in 22 p. cent of the cases, severe ventricular excitability perturbations were observed in 21 p. cent, myocardial necrosis in 14 p. cent, cardiovascular collapse in 21 p. cent and hypertensions in 22 p cent. These complications are often associated. In the discussion, the authors underline anesthetic induction as a cause of Prinzmetal's angina in 50 p. cent of the cases. They put the accent on the severity of peroperative crisis followed in 50 p. cent of the cases by serious ventricular excitability perturbations. In 25 p. cent of the cases myocardial necrosis is a complication of the spasm of a coronary artery. In this field, posterior necrosis are more frequent and correspond to the spasm of the right coronary artery. All the patients of this series, except one, develop necrosis in the spastic area (by-passed or not). Per-operative hypertension has no incidence on the occurrence of post-operative complications. Lastly, continuous per-operative infusions of nitroglycerine has been performed in several patients in order to reduce morbidity of this type of surgery.
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PMID:[Prinzmetal's angina during myocardial revascularisation. Cardiovascular complications in 71 patients (author's transl)]. 31 82

Although both sudden death and acute myocardial infarction are almost always associated with long-standing obstructive coronary artery disease, both may originate in the myocardium. Spasm has been suggested as a factor contributing to sudden death. Not all persons dying of acute myocardial infarction have narrowed coronary arteries, nor do all persons with obstructed arteries die of heart disease. The first phase of acute myocardial infarction may well involve myocardial necrosis, followed by stasis and collapse of collateral circulation and occasionally by coronary occlusion.
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PMID:Sudden death and acute myocardial infarction: clues to differences in pathophysiology. 70 7

A 72-year-old male underwent radical operation for cancer of the tongue. Anesthesia was maintained with the combination of enflurane-N2O-vecuronium and cervical epidural block. Five minutes after the cessation of the longstanding operation, VT and circulatory collapse occurred. After administration of lidocaine and ephedrine, VPC and ST elevation were noted, followed by VT and Vf. Cardioversion successfully restored sinus rhythm with no ST change, suggesting an episode of coronary artery spasm. The possible inducing factors in this case were hypotension and acute imbalance in autonomic nervous systems caused by hypovolemia, hypothermia, insufficient anesthetic depth, loss of surgical stress, neostigmine and epidural block. The authors reviewed case reports on coronary spasm, especially looking for possible inducing factors of coronary artery spasm during anesthesia.
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PMID:[Coronary artery spasm immediately after the long-standing operation for cancer of the tongue]. 147 69

Four Quarter Horse foals ranging in age from 6 days to 2 months were determined to have upper airway stridor secondary to polymyopathy suspected to be hyperkalemic periodic paralysis. Electromyography revealed spontaneous muscle activity in all muscles examined. Electromyographic findings were similar in the dams of 3 foals (No. 1, 3 and 4). Hyperkalemia was found in foals 1 and 4. Endoscopically, the upper airway stridor in foals 1 and 3 was confirmed to be attributable to laryngeal and pharyngeal collapse or spasm. Foals 1, 2, and 3 were treated with acetazolamide. Foal 4 was not treated, at the owner's request. Foals 2 and 3 improved with treatment, foal 4's condition was static, and foal 1 required a tracheostomy and laryngeal surgery to manage its upper airway stridor.
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PMID:Respiratory stridor associated with polymyopathy suspected to be hyperkalemic periodic paralysis in four quarter horse foals. 164 52

We investigated the clinical and pathophysiologic characteristics in patients with vasospastic angina who developed syncope and/or experienced aborted sudden death (SD). Vasospastic angina was diagnosed using the methylergonovine test. Syncope was found in 32 (10.4%) patients among 309 who were admitted to our institute in a one-year period. The most frequent cause of syncope was ventricular tachycardia which was found in 10 (31.2%) of the 32 patients. The next important cause of syncope was vasospastic angina which was found in 7 patients (21.8%). Among the 7 patients with vasospastic angina who experienced one or more syncopal episodes, there were 3 patients with aborted SD, 3 with syncope and one with shock. Cardiovascular collapse was observed in 4. Interior wall ischemia was found in 5 and anterior wall ischemia in 2 during the methylergonovine test. None of the 7 patients had significant coronary stenosis. Two patients had no prodromal symptom such as chest pain. Our results suggest that coronary artery spasm may be one of the most frequent cardiovascular diseases that causes syncope which is not always accompanied by a prodromal symptom. Therefore, coronary spasm should be distinguished in patients with unexplained syncope or aborted SD.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics and possible role of coronary artery spasm in syncope and/or aborted sudden death. 207 44

A case of acute traumatic dissection of the right internal mammary artery is presented in a patient who had both IMAs grafted for recurrent angina 10 years after initial vein coronary revascularisation. The event was mistaken for spasm, but because of severe circulatory collapse no time was available to treat the patient appropriately. The purpose of this report is to facilitate the early recognition and avoidance of this potentially fatal complication.
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PMID:Acute dissection of the internal mammary artery: a fatal complication of coronary artery bypass grafting. 222 55

One of the major problems associated with the treatment of ruptured intracranial aneurysms is the syndrome of late onset ischaemia. Patients so affected deteriorate neurologically and cerebral angiography often shows narrowing of the intracranial arteries, commonly known as vasospasm. Many drugs have been used to treat the condition but with little success. A new group of compounds have come into clinical use recently, the Prostaglandins. One member, Prostacyclin (PGI2 or Epoprostenol) is claimed to be one of the most potent vasodilators known. It was used at Manchester first on an experimental model. An isolated piece of human basilar artery was caused to contract using various agents. Prostacyclin was then used in an attempt to relax the contracted segment of artery. It, surprisingly, caused profound relaxation at very low concentrations of Prostacyclin, yet at higher concentrations it again caused the artery to contract. A literature search suggested this also was seen in the living subject and the crossover occurred at a dosage of 5 ng/kg/min. A limited pilot trial was therefore devised using Prostacyclin at the low concentration of 1 ng/kg/min and used on six patients. Patients were assessed, in the main, for clinical improvement and change in radiological spasm. Clinically, the results exceeded our expectations in that all patients improved, some back to normal. Radiologically, the vasospasm changed but did not revert completely and also unusual extracranial-intracranial anastomoses appeared in the angiograms. In addition, in one patient, cerebral blood flow showed a more than threefold increase. No generalised cardiovascular collapse occurred and no bleeding tendency was observed.
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PMID:Prostacyclin: a new treatment for vasospasm associated with subarachnoid haemorrhage. 305 39

Between 1982 and 1983, we experienced four cases of hemodynamic collapse accompanied by an ST-segment depression in the ECG lead II, shortly after the cessation of cardiopulmonary bypass. The bypass graft flows monitored in these patients during the hemodynamic collapse episodes were remarkably low. In three cases, nitroglycerin (0.5-1 mg) was injected directly into the vein graft, which increased the graft flow suddenly, returned the ST-segment to the baseline, and improved the circulatory condition. Since 1984, however, diltiazem has been used in the cardioplegic solution and postoperative drip infusion. Due to the introduction of this drug, coronary artery spasm has not been seen in any of our patients since. These findings show that the monitoring of ST-segment changes and bypass graft flows are useful in the early diagnosis of coronary artery spasm after myocardial revascularization. Direct infusion of nitroglycerin into the vein graft is effective for the treatment of spasm, while diltiazem is useful in the prevention of coronary artery spasm incidental to myocardial revascularization.
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PMID:Coronary artery spasm during coronary artery bypass surgery: its diagnosis, treatment and prevention. 315 18

The paper describes the history, symptoms and clinical findings of a typical spinal segmental strain with joint blocking. Also provided are an overview and discussion of joint blocking theories. A mechanism is hypothesized whereby joint blocking may be viewed as an actively maintained, reversible, biomechanical phenomenon. The theory proposes that unisegmental multifid and rotator spasm physiologically locks the motion segment. The axes of motion shift towards one facet joint and mobility becomes blocked by the inability of the segment to articulate about its new axis. Manipulative cavitation initiates restoration of the axes of motion, collapse of muscle spasm and recovery of mobility with an immediate reduction of symptoms.
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PMID:Spinal joint blocking. 315 60

Coronary artery spasm during the early postoperative period following cardiopulmonary bypass for coronary artery surgery can be an unrecognized cause of sudden, severe cardiopulmonary collapse. The literature regarding perioperative coronary artery spasm is reviewed, and methods of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment are suggested. Preoperative angina at rest appears to be an important identifying factor in patients who experience postoperative coronary spasm. Anatomically, the presence of a relatively normal, dominant right coronary may also indicate increased risk for early post-coronary bypass spasm. Acute hypotension is often the first sign of coronary artery spasm, and conventional treatment methods may only worsen the vasospastic reaction. Peripheral intravenous nitroglycerin infusion has often been unsuccessful treatment while intragraft or intracoronary nitroglycerin injection or administration of calcium channel-blocking drugs, or both, has proven to be effective in reversing the coronary artery spasm and ventricular dysfunction. Reluctance to use vasodilating agents must be overcome, even in the face of hypotension, when evidence of spasm is present.
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PMID:Coronary artery spasm following coronary artery surgery. 1021 68


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