Abstract: | A relationship of coronary arterial spasm to variant angina pectoris, subendocardial ischemia, major ventricular arrhythmias and myocardial infarction has been demonstrated. In 29 patients, spasm was angiographically observed in normal-appearing coronary arteries (7 patients) as well as superimposed on various degrees of coronary atherosclerotic obstruction (22 patients). All patients experienced an atypical anginal syndrome; 16 patients also experienced typical exertional angina. Coronary spasm appeared to be a major contributory factor in eight occurrences of myocardial infarction and in 11 incidents of ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation and heart block. Coronary spasm in the 29 cases was distributed in the following fashion: left main trunk, 6 cases; right main trunk, 12 cases; proximal left anterior descending artery, 13 cases; proximal circumflex artery, 1 case; distal left anterior descending artery, 1 case; and distal circumflex artery, 2 cases. In 5 cases coronary spasm was noted at multiple sites. In contrast to findings in patients manifesting only typical exertional angina, the hemodynamic findings during spasm were those of a hypodynamic state. Left ventricular systolic pressure decreased from 138.9 ± 6.0 (mean ± standard error of the mean) to 113.2 ± 6.2 mm Hg; left ventricular end-diastolic pressure did not change significantly. Myocardial lactate extraction during spasm was invariably markedly reduced: −53.19 percent ± 15.44 (P < 0.001). However, the effect of coronary sinus pacing on myocardial lactate extraction was not significantly abnormal: +15.74 percent ± 6.66. The respective roles of medical and surgical intervention are uncertain. Only 3 patients had a completely satisfactory pharmacologic response to nitrates alone or in combination with propranolol, and the condition of 5 others was partially improved; the remaining 21 patients were judged intractable to medical management. Coronary bypass surgery was performed as the ultimate recourse in 18 patients. However, short-term results reveal that only nine (50 percent) showed improvement, four (22 percent) had myocardial infarction during or after surgery and four (22 percent) died. These studies confirm that coronary arterial spasm is a definite pathogenetic factor in a variety of acute myocardial ischemic syndromes. The incidence and full clinical significance of this functional disorder remain to be determined. |