首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Episodes of angina pectoris without electrocardiographic (ECG) signs of myocardial ischemia during 24-hour ambulatory monitoring were studied in 128 patients with a history of stable angina, angiographically proven coronary artery disease and positive exercise test results. In all, 341 episodes of ischemic ECG changes (ST-segment depression greater than 1 mm for greater than 1 minute) and 190 episodes of angina pectoris were observed: 86 episodes consisted of both ECG changes and angina pectoris, 255 episodes consisted only of ECG changes, and 104 episodes only of angina pectoris. Duration and magnitude of ST-segment deviation and heart rate at the onset of ischemia were similar in the 86 symptomatic and the 255 asymptomatic episodes with ECG changes. The 104 episodes of angina pectoris without ECG changes were detected in 44 patients (34%) (group A); 29 of them had only episodes with angina pectoris and 15 patients had both--episodes of angina pectoris with and without ECG changes. In 84 patients (66%) (group B) angina pectoris without ECG changes was not observed; all episodes were accompanied by ischemic ECG changes in these patients. No differences in the angiographic extent of coronary artery disease and in exercise test data were seen in both groups A and B; however, maximal ST-segment depression during exercise testing was significantly greater in group B than in group A patients (2.4 +/- 0.8 mm vs 1.9 +/- 0.9 mm; p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
We studied the effect of a monotherapy of isosorbiddinitrate on symptomatic and asymptomatic ischemic episodes in 15 ambulatory patients with chronic stable angina pectoris, positive exercise test, and coronary stenosis greater than 70%. Transient ST-segment depression (greater than 0.1 mV for at least 1 min) was documented by 48-h Holter monitoring during a control period without anti-ischemic therapy and at the end of 14 days of treatment with 120 mg o.d. isosorbiddinitrate slow-release. In the control period, 68 asymptomatic and 28 symptomatic ischemic episodes were detected; most of the episodes occurred in the morning between 6.00h and 12.00h (41 episodes) and in the afternoon between 12.00h and 18.00h (36 episodes). Under anti-ischemic therapy the number of episodes and the total duration of ischemia was reduced by 46% and 53%, respectively (p less than 0.01). The anti-ischemic effect was most evident during the morning and the afternoon; the ischemic episodes during the evening and the night were not significantly diminished. It is concluded that in patients with stable angina pectoris a single high-dose of isosorbiddinitrate significantly reduces the number and duration of transient ischemic episodes during daily life.  相似文献   

3.
Transient myocardial ischemia during daily life in patients with syndrome X   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Nineteen patients with syndrome X (typical exertional angina, positive exercise test response [at least 0.1 mV of ST-segment depression], no evidence of coronary spasm and angiographically normal coronary arteries) underwent continuous 48-hour electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring during unrestricted daily life. Fifty-eight ischemic episodes of at least 0.1 mV of ST-segment depression were observed in the same ECG leads that showed ST depression during stress testing: 28 (48%) were accompanied by anginal pain and 30 (52%) were asymptomatic. No significant differences were found between painful and silent ST-segment depression with regard to the number of episodes, their temporal distribution, magnitude, duration or heart rate (HR) at onset of ST-segment depression. In the minute preceding ischemic ST shifts, HR did not change in 33% of episodes or increased by less than 10 beats/min in 28%. HR at onset of ST depression was significantly lower during ambulatory ECG monitoring than during exercise testing (98 ± 18 vs 117 ± 18 beats/min, p < 0.01). During ambulatory monitoring, 85 episodes of sinus tachycardia (exceeding by 10 to 80 beats/min the HR that triggered ischemia during exercise testing) occurred in the absence of angina or ST-segment shifts. The results of this study suggest that in patients with syndrome X, (1) myocardial ischemia frequently develops during daily life; (2) silent ischemia is an important component of this syndrome; and (3) increased oxygen demand in the presence of impaired coronary vasodilatory capacity is not the only cause of myocardial ischemia. Active mechanisms that transiently reduce coronary flow may act and explain occurrence of angina at rest and with minimal exertion.  相似文献   

4.
To assess whether Holter monitoring improves the sensitivity of exercise testing in identifying incomplete myocardial revascularization, both tests were performed in 45 patients from 3 to 5 months after elective coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) for stable angina pectoris. Coronary angiography revealed incomplete revascularization in 26 patients. Six of these 26 had 52 episodes of ST-segment depression during Holter monitoring and myocardial ischemia during exercise testing. Their exercise capacity was significantly lower than that of 10 other patients in whom the results of exercise testing only were positive (heart rate at 0.1 mV ST-segment depression 112 +/- 9 vs 123 +/- 15 beats/min, p less than 0.001). In the other 10 patients with incomplete myocardial revascularization the results of both investigations were negative. The graft patency rate was lower in patients with a positive response to exercise testing than in those with a negative response (52% vs 71%, p less than 0.005). Myocardial revascularization was angiographically complete in 19 patients. In 18 of these 19 patients the findings of both investigations were negative; in 1 patient Holter monitoring revealed episodes of ST-segment elevation suggestive of variant angina. Thus, after CABG for stable angina pectoris the results of Holter monitoring do not improve the sensitivity of exercise testing in identifying patients with angiographically incomplete myocardial revascularization because findings are positive only in patients with low exercise capacity. Both tests fail to show evidence of myocardial ischemia in most patients with angiographically complete myocardial revascularization.  相似文献   

5.
S Stern  D Tzivoni 《Herz》1987,12(5):318-327
With the inception of continuous ECG monitoring with high-fidelity reproduction of the ST-segment, silent myocardial ischemia has been regarded with increasing importance in the detection and management of coronary artery disease. With the aid of a variety of invasive and noninvasive methods, the validity of ST-segment depression as indicative of myocardial ischemia, even in the absence of symptoms, has been adequately documented. In completely asymptomatic subjects with positive evidence of silent ischemia in the exercise ECG or Holter monitoring, the risk of developing a future manifestation of coronary artery disease may be up to ten-fold higher than in individuals with negative tests In patients with established coronary artery disease, concomitant use of continuous ECG monitoring and exercise testing, methods which complement each other rather than being mutually exclusive, a substantial number of patients with otherwise typical angina pectoris may be found to have silent ischemic episodes. An adequate differentiation between those with symptomatic and those who are asymptomatic based on characterization with respect to age, sex, hypertension, coronary anatomy, etc., has not been successful. Patients with silent ischemia during exercise may also exhibit more episodes of silent ischemia during daily activities and up to 75% of ischemic episodes may be asymptomatic. In general, however, silent ischemia during exercise appears more common than silent ischemia only during daily activities. In the latter case, since there is usually no increase in heart rate, the pathophysiology is regarded as dissimilar from that associated with exercise-induced ischemia. While the presence of silent ischemia appears quite common in patients after acute myocardial infarction, its occurrence, to date, has not been confirmed to carry additional risk, whereas in unstable angina, the association of silent ischemia is indicative of a higher probability of subsequent cardiac events.  相似文献   

6.
During exercise by patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), electrocardiographic evidence of myocardial ischemia may precede the onset of angina or may be unassociated with angina, even at peak levels of stress. However, neither the precise incidence of silent versus symptomatic ischemic episodes nor their interrelation in this setting has been clearly defined. The prevalence of silent and symptomatic myocardial ischemia during treadmill exercise testing was determined in 92 patients with angiographically documented CAD. The study group comprised 77 men (84%) and 15 women (16%) of mean age 57 years (range 32 to 79). Exercise testing resulted in ischemic ST-segment depression (greater than or equal to 1 mm for greater than or equal to 80 ms) only or in association with delayed (greater than or equal to 1 minute) angina in 39 patients (42%); angina only or in association with delayed ST-segment depression occurred in 42 patients (46%); and simultaneous occurrence of angina and ST-segment depression was noted in 11 patients (12%). Analysis of clinical, exercise and angiographic factors (age, sex, history of myocardial infarction, heart rate, maximal ST-segment depression, extent of CAD and left ventricular ejection fraction) revealed no significant correlation with the frequency of symptomatic and silent myocardial ischemia during exercise. Asymptomatic myocardial ischemia occurred commonly during exercise in patients with CAD, but there were no differences in the characteristics of patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic episodes.  相似文献   

7.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the incidence, characteristics and angiographic significance of myocardial ischemia detected on Holter monitoring in a group of patients with stable angina pectoris. SETTING: Department of Cardiology of a Central Terciary Hospital. METHODS: In 24 patients (pts) with stable angina pectoris and proven coronary artery disease (11 pts with left main or three vessel disease; 13 pts with one or two vessel disease), a 24 hour Holter monitoring was performed. Two groups of ischemic episodes were considered: Group I with 65 ischemic episodes detected in pts with left main or three vessel disease and group II constituted by 17 ischemic episodes detected in pts with one or two vessel disease. RESULTS: The incidence of myocardial ischemia was 91% in pts with left main or three vessel disease and 46% in pts with one or two vessel disease. Statistically significant differences were seen between group I and II concerning the mean heart rate variation from two minutes before onset of ST-segment depression to its onset (3.5 bpm vs 7.4 bpm; p less than 0.05) and from the onset of ST-segment depression to its maximal depression (6.5 bpm vs 15 bpm; p less than 0.000001). CONCLUSIONS: The presence of myocardial ischemia and some of its characteristics on Holter monitoring seem to have a relation with the severity of coronary artery disease in patients with stable angina pectoris.  相似文献   

8.
To determine the incidence of ventricular arrhythmias related to episodes of transient myocardial ischemia during ambulatory electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring, 97 patients with stable angina pectoris, angiographically proved coronary artery disease and an abnormal exercise test were studied. A total of 573 episodes with ST segment depression were documented: in 118 episodes (21%) the patients were symptomatic and in 455 (79%) they remained asymptomatic. Ventricular arrhythmias (greater than 5 premature ventricular beats/min, bigeminy, couplets or salvos of premature ventricular beats) occurred during 27 (5%) ischemic episodes in a subset of 10 patients (10%) (group A). The other 87 patients (90%) (group B) showed exclusively ischemic episodes without ventricular arrhythmias. Comparison of patients in group A and group B showed no differences in hemodynamic, angiographic, exercise testing and ambulatory ECG monitoring data. Ischemic episodes with and without ventricular arrhythmias showed a similar duration and amplitude of ST segment depression and a comparable heart rate at the onset of ischemia. Both types of ischemic episodes, with and without arrhythmias, occurred predominantly during the morning hours between 6:00 AM and noon, and both types remained asymptomatic to within similar percentages. The data demonstrate that ventricular arrhythmias are related to transient myocardial ischemia in only a few patients with stable angina pectoris; these arrhythmias are related neither to the degree of ischemia during ambulatory ECG monitoring nor to the occurrence of anginal symptoms.  相似文献   

9.
Exercise electrocardiographic (ECG) testing during follow-up after coronary angioplasty is widely applied to evaluate the efficacy of angioplasty, even in asymptomatic patients. One hundred forty-one asymptomatic patients without previous myocardial infarction underwent quantitative exercise ECG testing and quantitative coronary angiography 1 to 6 months after successful angioplasty in single vessel coronary artery disease to 1) determine the value of exercise ECG testing to detect "silent" restenosis, and 2) assess the long-term prognostic value of exercise ECG testing and coronary angiography. The prevalence of restenosis (defined as greater than or equal to 50% luminal narrowing at the dilation site) was 12% in this selected study group. Of 26 patients with an abnormal exercise ECG (ST segment depression greater than or equal to 0.1 mV), only 4 (15%) showed recurrence of stenosis. Sensitivity and specificity for detection of restenosis were 24% and 82%, respectively. One hundred thirty-four patients (95%) were followed up 1 to 64 months (mean 35) after exercise ECG testing and coronary angiography. Thirty-two patients (24%) experienced a cardiac event: in 25 patients (78%) the initial event was recurrent angina pectoris (New York Heart Association class III or IV) and in 7 patients (22%) it was myocardial infarction, although cardiac death did not occur. The mean interval between exercise ECG testing and the initial cardiac events was 14 months (range 1 to 55), whereas 47% of the initial events took place less than or equal to 6 months after exercise ECG testing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The clinical characteristics of 65 patients with mixed angina were classified by means of (1) a questionnaire investigating the proportion of symptoms occurring at rest and on effort, (2) an exercise stress test, (3) 24-hour ambulatory Holter monitoring, and (4) coronary arteriography. According to the questionnaire, the proportion of effort-induced anginal episodes ranged from 1 to 99%. The ischemic threshold during exercise testing ranged from 110 x 10(2) to 350 x 10(2) mm Hg x beats/min. At least 1 episode of ST-segment depression was observed in 29 of the 65 patients during Holter monitoring. Ischemic episodes during Holter monitoring were more frequent (p less than 0.05) in patients reporting greater than or equal to 50% of anginal attacks on effort, with moderate to severe limitation of exercise capacity and with multivessel coronary artery disease. The effect on ambulatory ischemia of a 6-week treatment with a beta blocker (metoprolol CR, 200 mg once daily) or a dihydropyridine calcium antagonist (nifedipine retard 20 mg twice daily) were then compared according to a double-blind, parallel group design. Metoprolol significantly reduced the number and duration of the ischemic episodes during daily life (p less than 0.05) irrespective of the patients' clinical characteristics. Nifedipine was ineffective, particularly in patients with angina predominantly on effort and with a moderate to severe reduction in exercise tolerance. It is concluded that in patients with mixed angina, ischemic episodes during daily life are more likely to occur in patients with a clinical presentation suggesting poor coronary reserve.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
ST-segment analysis on 24-hour Holter ECG was performed in 64 patients with angiographically proven coronary artery disease, a positive exercise test and chronic stable angina. During 125 days of recording, 494 episodes of transient ST-segment depression were observed, at an average of 4.0 +/- 3.7 episodes (1-13 episodes, median: 3 episodes) per day. The duration of ST depression per episode was 13.2 +/- 14.4 min (1-90 min; median: 8 min). No episodes of ST-elevation were observed. Only 27 (5.5%) ischemic episodes occurred during the night, between midnight and 6:00 a.m., but they were frequently observed during the morning hours between 7:00 and 12:00 a.m. Nearly all episodes of ischemia were preceded by an increase in heart rate. However, heart rate at the onset of significant ST-segment depression was significantly lower during Holter monitoring than during exercise test (p less than 0.001); this indicates that factors additional to the increase in myocardial demand might be relevant for transient myocardial ischemia during daily life. 382 of the 494 episodes (77.3%) of ischemia were asymptomatic; heart rate at the onset of ST-segment depression was similar in symptomatic and asymptomatic episodes; however, in asymptomatic episodes, maximal heart rate was significantly lower (p less than 0.001) and the duration of the episodes significantly longer (p less than 0.001). The percentage of asymptomatic episodes was very high in patients with one-vessel disease, whereas the duration and amount of ST-segment depression, as well as heart rate, at the onset of ischemia, were not dependent on the extent of coronary artery disease.  相似文献   

12.
Patients with syndrome X (typical angina pectoris, positive exercise tests [greater than or equal to 1 mm of ST-segment depression], no evidence of coronary spasm and angiographically normal coronary arteries) have a reduced coronary flow reserve due to inappropriate dilatation of small resistive vessels. To assess whether alpha-adrenergic mechanisms play a role in the genesis of ST-ischemic changes in syndrome X, 12 patients with this syndrome (2 men and 10 women, mean age 50 +/- 6 years) underwent exercise testing and 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring. They were done off treatment and after alpha blockade with prazosin and clonidine on 2 separate weeks. Despite treatment, all exercise tests remained positive and patients were stopped because of progressive angina pain. Compared to the off-treatment tests, exercise duration and heart rate-blood pressure product at 1 mm of ST-segment depression did not change significantly after prazosin (617 +/- 203 vs 663 +/- 203 seconds and 23,857 +/- 6,125 vs 22,098 +/- 4,816 beats/min X mm Hg, respectively) and clonidine (684 +/- 148 vs 649 +/- 80 seconds and 25,514 +/- 2,386 vs 24,567 +/- 2,001 beats/min X mm Hg, respectively). Ambulatory monitoring showed similar results regarding number of episodes of ST-segment depression greater than or equal to 0.1 mV during control and after prazosin (39 vs 38) or clonidine (26 vs 23) treatment. None of the 8 patients who also underwent provocative testing with phenylephrine had ischemic electrocardiographic changes; only 2 experienced chest pain during the test.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The long-term course of angina and the electrocardiographic signs of ischemia were assessed in 13 patients (10 women and 3 men, mean age 49 +/- 6 years) with typical angina pectoris, positive exercise tests, no evidence of coronary spasm and angiographically normal coronary arteries (syndrome X). Clinical and electrocardiographic parameters as well as results of exercise testing and 24-hour electrocardiographic monitoring were assessed at presentation and after a mean follow-up of 6.3 years (range 3 to 9). Mean number of anginal episodes and nitroglycerin consumption per week were similar at presentation and at the last follow-up. Furthermore, no significant difference was noted in heart rate-systolic blood pressure product at 0.1 mV of ST-segment depression (20,363 +/- 5,747 vs 21,649 +/- 5,687 beats/min x mm Hg), at angina (19,223 +/- 5,680 vs 20,126 +/- 6,023 beats/min x mm Hg) and at peak exercise (22,057 +/- 5,669 vs 22,868 +/- 6,122 beats/min x mm Hg). Time to 0.1 mV of ST-segment depression, to angina and to peak exercise was also similar (595 +/- 163 vs 631 +/- 184 s, 524 +/- 156 vs 571 +/- 168 s and 671 +/- 168 vs 718 +/- 186 s, respectively). The number of episodes of ST-segment depression greater than or equal to 0.1 mV during electrocardiographic monitoring was similar at presentation and follow-up (31 vs 25) as was the proportion of painful episodes (39 vs 36%). None of the patients developed major coronary events or cardiomyopathy during follow-up.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The relation of silent ischemia in patients with stable angina to known predictors of severity of coronary disease on exercise stress testing and coronary angiography is poorly defined. This issue was therefore examined with use of Holter electrocardiographic (ECG) recordings, treadmill exercise tests and angiographic indexes in 102 patients (not taking antianginal therapy) and the results were compared with Holter and treadmill findings in 42 volunteers. A total of 159 ischemic episodes (90% silent) were identified during 2,503 h on Holter recording in 97 patients (mean duration per episode 22.7 +/- 147 min; range 1 to 234). Holter recordings had a 92% specificity and an 80% positive predictive value, but a sensitivity of only 37% and a negative predictive value of 27% for coronary disease. Sixty-three patients (Group I) had no ischemia on Holter recording, 22 (Group II) had a cumulative duration of 1 to 60 min/24 h and in 12 (Group III) ischemia exceeded 60 min/24 h. There was no significant correlation between cumulative ischemia duration on Holter recording and exercise duration or time to ST segment depression on treadmill exercise. In general, the greater the number of coronary vessels involved and the higher the proximal coronary artery stenosis score, the greater the likelihood of ischemia and the longer the cumulative ischemia duration on Holter recording. Irrespective of the severity of coronary disease, in about 25% of Holter recordings in each angiographic category there were no ischemic episodes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The clinical syndrome of angina pectoris was accurately described over 200 years ago by Sir William Heberden. However, in recent years, we have learned that many episodes of myocardial ischemia occur that are not accompanied by symptoms of angina pectoris. These silent ischemic episodes may be detected either during exercise testing, using electrocardiographic criteria that can be combined with scintigraphic studies evaluating myocardial blood flow (thallium perfusion studies) or left ventricular function (gated blood pool scans). In addition, continuous electrocardiographic (Holter) monitoring can be used for the detection of transient ST-segment changes; these changes on Holter monitoring have been correlated with abnormalities of myocardial perfusion and function, indicating that they represent true ischemic events.

Studies have shown that patients with coronary artery disease who have evidence of ongoing ischemia, whether symptomatic or silent, have an increased risk for experiencing subsequent cardiac events than patients without evidence of ischemia. Many studies have demonstrated that ischemia during an exercise study after myocardial infarction identifies patients at high risk for recurrent cardiac events, whether or not the ischemia is associated with angina pectoris. Holter monitoring has allowed for the detection of ischemic events out of hospital in ambulatory patients. Studies in stable angina patients have shown that there are many asymptomatic episodes in this setting, which are often occurring at low heart rates during activities of everyday life, without an apparent significant increase in myocardial oxygen demands, and these episodes may even be precipitated by mental stress. Several studies have suggested that the presence of ongoing silent ischemia in unstable angina patients and postinfarction patients can identify those at higher risk for cardiac events. The results of these studies will be discussed.

The treatment of coronary artery disease has been for the most part symptomatic, with the primary goal of relieving symptoms of angina pectoris. Several exceptions include patients with left main disease or severe proximal 3-vessel disease, who have extensive amounts of myocardium at risk and who are generally referred for bypass surgery.

These new data indicating that the presence and severity of asymptomatic ischemia have adverse prognostic implications suggest that therapy should be directed at reducing the total ischemic profile, i.e., symptomatic and asymptomatic episodes. Guidelines for appropriate screening and therapeutic strategies will be discussed.  相似文献   


16.
In patients with myocardial infarction (MI) the presence or absence of lesions in vessels other than the one which perfuses the infarcted area, has implications regarding coronary bypass surgery, long term anticoagulant therapy, work capacity and prognosis. We investigated whether involvement of a 2nd or 3rd vessels as demonstrated by coronary angiography can be predicted on the basis of angina pectoris and/or ischemic ST-segment depression during exercise. Inferior myocardial infarction (IMI, n = 146) Severe lesions (greater than or equal to 75%) of a 2nd or 3rd vessel were found in 61.7% of patients with IMI, who developed angina pectoris and ischemic ST-segment depression, in 18.6% of patients with ST-segment depression only, in 9.1% of patients with angina pectoris only and in 3.4% with neither angina pectoris nor ST-segment depression. Anteroseptal infarction (ASI, n = 116) Severe lesions (greater than or equal to 75%) of a 2nd or 3rd vessel were found in 30.2% of patients with ASI, who developed Angina pectoris and ischemic ST-segment depression; in 26.6% of patients with ST-segment depression only, in 20.0% of patients with angina pectoris only and in 3.0% of the patients with neither angina pectoris nor ST-segment depression. The clinical implications of the results are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
In patients with cerebral transient ischemic attacks or stroke myocardial infarction is the leading long-term cause of death. Despite the importance of coronary artery disease, patients with cerebrovascular insufficiency are seldom evaluated for the detection of ischemic heart disease and usually the cardiological evaluation is limited to the patients with angina or previous myocardial infarction. In order to identify asymptomatic coronary artery disease 74 consecutive patients with cerebral ischemia, and without symptoms or electrocardiographic signs of ischemic heart disease, underwent a maximal exercise treadmill test according to the Bruce protocol. An exercise Thallium myocardial scintigraphy was performed in patients with positive exercise test. A control group of 74 asymptomatic subjects underwent the same study protocol. The study population (Group I) included 57 men and 17 women; the age ranged from 22 to 72 years (mean age 54 years). An adequate exercise test was obtained in 67 patients. Exercise test was positive (ST-segment depression greater than or equal to 1.5 mm) in 19 cases (28%). The end points were exhaustion in 15 patients, ST-segment depression greater than 3 mm in 2 and systolic blood pressure greater than 240 mmHg in 2. The exercise Thallium myocardial scintigraphy was normal in 2 and abnormal in 17: reversible perfusion defects were detected in 12 cases and fixed defects in 5. In the control group (Group II), comparable for age and sex, exercise test was positive in 4 cases (5%; p less than 0.01 percentage of positive exercise tests in Group I vs Group II); the exercise myocardial scintigraphy was normal in 1 and abnormal in 3 subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The purpose of the present study was to analyze the prevalence of asymptomatic (silent) myocardial ischemia during exercise testing among patients with effort-induced angina pectoris, and further, to compare the pain threshold of patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic myocardial ischemia. A group of 26 patients comprised the study. In half of the patients myocardial ischemia during the exercise testing was silent and in one half it was symptomatic. Asymptomatic myocardial ischemia was defined as an asymptomatic ST-segment depression greater than or equal to 0.1 mV, lasting longer than 60 s during an exercise test. In patients with asymptomatic ischemia the pain thresholds both on toe and finger were significantly higher than in patients with symptomatic ischemia: mean values were 10.1 versus 4.9 mA on the toes, p less than 0.025, and 8.4 versus 2.5 mA on the fingers, p less than 0.01. We conclude that asymptomatic myocardial ischemia during exercise test is seen often in patients with angina pectoris and that this may be due to an increased pain threshold.  相似文献   

19.
To evaluate the prognostic significance of silent ischemia during exercise testing, 152 consecutive patients (143 males, 9 females) with a mean SD of 55 +/- 7 years (age range 32-73) who underwent exercise testing and coronary arteriography within 3 months were studied. All patients had the following characteristics: 1) a positive electrocardiographic exercise test response; 2) significant coronary artery disease on the arteriography; 3) uninterrupted clinical follow-up for a minimum of 6 months. The 152 patients were divided in 2 groups: group I: 56 patients (37%) with ischemic ST-segment depression during exercise testing without angina (silent ischemia); group II: 96 patients (63%) with ischemic ST-segment depression and angina (symptomatic ischemia). Patients in group I and group II showed similar time to ST-segment depression (3.6 +/- 1.5 min vs 3.2 +/- 1.4 min; p = NS), maximal ST-segment depression and peak heart rate-systolic pressure product (21,151 +/- 7,124 vs 20,456 +/- 6,024; p = NS). Exercise duration was longer in group I than in group II (5.6 +/- 2.1 min vs 4.8 +/- 1.5 min; p less than 0.001). The extent of coronary artery disease defined by the number of significant narrowed coronary vessels, left ventricular end diastolic pressure and ejection fraction were similar in the 2 groups. Sixty six patients who underwent coronary bypass surgery were not included in the analysis. The remaining 86 patients (40 in group I and 46 in group II) were medically treated. The mean follow-up period was 43,5 +/- 25 months (range 6-101).2+ myocardial ischemia during exercise testing.  相似文献   

20.
OBJECTIVES: We sought to investigate the relationship among C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), clinical characteristics, exercise stress test responses, and ST-segment changes during daily life in patients with typical chest pain and normal coronary angiograms (CPNCA). BACKGROUND: Patients with CPNCA have coronary microvascular endothelial dysfunction and myocardial ischemia. Elevated hs-CRP levels have been related to atherogenesis and endothelial dysfunction. The relationship between hs-CRP and disease activity has not been previously investigated in CPNCA patients. METHODS: We studied 137 consecutive CPNCA patients (mean age, 57 +/- 9; 33 men). All completed standardized angina questionnaires, underwent exercise stress testing, 24-h ambulatory electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring (Holter), and hs-CRP measurements at study entry. RESULTS: C-reactive protein levels (mg/l) were higher in patients with frequent (2.9 +/- 3.3) and prolonged (3.9 +/- 4.1) chest pain episodes, and in those with ST-segment depression on exercise testing (2.6 +/- 2.8) and Holter monitoring (3.4 +/- 3.1) compared with patients with occasional (1.3 +/- 1.2; p = 0.002) or shorter chest pain (1.5 +/- 1.3; p < 0.001) episodes, negative exercise stress testing (1.1 +/- 1.1; p < 0.001), and no ST-segment shifts on Holter monitoring (0.9 +/- 0.7; p < 0.001). Moreover, we found a correlation between hs-CRP concentration and number of ischemic episodes during Holter monitoring (r = 0.65; p < 0.001) and with the magnitude of ST-segment depression on exercise testing (r = -0.43; p < 0.001). The hs-CRP was the only independent variable (multivariate logistic regression) capable of predicting positive findings on Holter monitoring (odds ratio [OR], 3.8; confidence interval [CI], 2.3 to 6.2) and exercise testing (OR, 1.7; CI, 1.2 to 2.2). CONCLUSIONS: The hs-CRP correlates with symptoms and ECG markers of myocardial ischemia in CPNCA patients. Whether hs-CRP is related to the pathogenesis of angina in these patients deserves further investigation.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号