Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirty patients (26 men, 4 women) aged from 32 to 73 years (mean 54 years) who developed anterior (14 cases) or posterior (16 cases) myocardial infarction received intravenous streptokinase in doses of 1,500,000 units 2 to 10 hours (mean 4 hours) after the onset of infarction. Coronary angiography, performed 18.6 days on average after thrombolysis, showed a distinct predominance of asymmetrical stenosis with irregular walls and a narrow neck (10 cases, 33 p. 100) or of complete occlusion (12 cases, 40 p. 100) in the artery responsible for the infarction. Complete occlusion probably was the ultimate stage of stenosis. In contrast, the various angiographic images observed in arteries unrelated to the infarction were evenly distributed. The radiological morphology of coronary arterial lesions after a recent infarction is suggestive of ruptured atheromatous plaque, sometimes complicated by thrombosis in situ. Identical images are seen in unstable angina. These findings indicate that one single therapeutic approach should be applied to the most severe types of coronary disease due to atherosclerosis.
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PMID:[Angiographic morphology of the coronary arteries after a recent myocardial infarction treated by intravenous thrombolysis]. 249 70

Predictors for a reintervention following a successful first re-do surgical revascularization (CABG) were examined. Success and limitations of the reintervention procedures were evaluated. Between 3/88 and 3/95, 16.81% (302/1796) patients who had undergone a first re-do CABG surgery in the authors' center, required a reintervention. Graft angioplasty was performed in 158 (52.32%) patients and a second re-do CABG in 47.68% (n = 144). Graft angioplasty was preferred over surgery in patients aged 70 years or older (43% versus 24.3%, P<0.001) and in patients with unstable angina (55.6% versus 33.3%, NS) or a Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction (LVEF) <30% (34.8% versus 20%, P<0.05). Re-do CABG was preferred over graft angioplasty for multivessel revascularization (3+/-0.3 versus 1+/-0.6, P<0.001), proximal occlusive disease (P<0.001) and for graft disease of a longer duration (7.18+/-1.7 years versus 3+/-0.6 years, P<0.01). The independent predictors of a reintervention were (i) lack of arterial revascularization and (ii) inability to achieve a complete revascularization in a previous operation. The predictors of a failed graft angioplasty were diameter stenosis >70%, long occlusive lesions (multivariate), angulation, calcification and asymmetrical lesions (univariate). Failed graft angioplasty required a re-do CABG (n = 48: early 21, late 27), repeat graft angioplasty (n = 34: early 8, late 26) or transplant (n = 1). Recurrent symptoms following a second re-do CABG required a graft angioplasty (n = 6: early 2, late 4), a subsequent re-do CABG (n = 32) or a transplant (n = 4). Cumulative incidence of cardiac events at 1 month, and 1 and 8 years were: 20, 40.45 and 66.44% following graft angioplasty and 5.5, 10 and 56.55% following a second re-do CABG, respectively (P<0.05). Actuarial survival at 1 month and 6 years following graft angioplasty were 97.15 and 77.22%, and 94.7 and 83.26% after a second re-do CABG, respectively (NS). Re-do CABG was more effective and durable. Graft angioplasty provided a good palliation in suitable cases and also postponed the need for a high-risk surgical intervention for more favorable conditions.
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PMID:Reinterventions for recurrent ischemic heart disease following a successful first re-do myocardial revascularization: predictors, indications and results. 1038 58