Application and safety of outpatient ergonovine testing in accurately detecting coronary spasm in patients with possible variant angina |
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Authors: | Robert Ginsburg Irene H Lamb Michael R Bristow John S Schroeder Donald C Harrison |
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Affiliation: | Cardiology Division, Stanford University Medical Center Stanford, Calif., USA. |
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Abstract: | We analyzed the results of 61 consecutive outpatient ergonovine provocation tests to determine the safety and efficacy of such outpatient testing for detecting coronary artery spasm (CAS). Criteria for outpatient testing included: clinical history suggestive of variant angina, noncritical coronary artery disease documented by coronary arteriography, normal exercise treadmill test, no symptomatic arrhythmias, and no history of recent myocardial infarction. All antianginal medications were tapered and stopped. Ergonovine maleate was given as a bolus at 3-minute intervals in consecutive doses of 0.05, 0.10, and 0.25 mg. A positive test was defined as chest pain accompanied by > 0.1 mV ST segment elevation on 12-lead ECG. If pain and ST-segment elevation occurred, intravenous and sublingual nitroglycerin were immediately administered for rellef of myocardial ischemia. Of the 61 patients studied, 10 had positive tests; there were no complications. Follow-up of the 51 patients with negative studies has not revealed cardiac etiology for their chest pain. We conclude that outpatient ergonovine testing is a safe and accurate diagnostic test for identifying CAS in a highly selected population of patients with possible variant angina when performed under carefully controlled conditions. |
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Keywords: | Reprint requests: Robert Ginsburg M.D. Division of Cardiology Stanford University Medical Center Stanford CA 94305. |
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