Background: Mental stress testing is considered a reliable method for diagnosing patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) who may be at risk for future events. It has been shown recently that myocardial ischemia induced during mental stress tests is specifically associated with peripheral arterial vasoconstriction.
Hypothesis: The study was undertaken to test the diagnostic capability of peripheral arterial tonometry (PAT) to detect peripheral arterial vasomotor changes.
Objectives: We sought to assess the added diagnostic value of peripheral artery tonometric (PAT) measurements, based on finger pulsatile arterial volume changes, to standard 12-lead stress electrocardiography (ECG), for detecting exercise-induced myocardial ischemia, using single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) as the standard of comparison in a double-blinded, multicenter protocol.
Methods: An automated algorithm for identifying myocardial ischemia from PAT was derived from 345 training cases. The PAT outcome was combined with the ECG result (ischemic, nonischemic, or equivocal), giving a PAT-enhanced value.
The effects of intravenous isosorbide dinitrate administered in high doses over a short period of time in 17 patients (14 men, 3 women, mean age 67 years) with anterior wall acute myocardial infarction were evaluated. Patients were classified into 2 groups based on the electrocardiographic pattern of acute ischemia. Patients presented with anterior acute myocardial infarction; an electrocardiographic pattern of third-degree ischemia demonstrated a more favorable electrocardiographic and radionuclear angiographic evolution than similar patients who presented with an electrocardiographic pattern of second-degree ischemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe coronary angiographic findings and the in-hospital prognosis of unstable angina pectoris presenting with T wave positivization only (group A: 32 patients) or with additional ST segment elevation (group B: 27 patients) were evaluated. Clinical data and haemodynamic parameters before and during unstable anginal events showed no significant statistical difference, indicating blood flow reduction as the probable mechanism of ischaemia in both groups. The incidence of hospital myocardial infarction was higher in patients of group B (group A 6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe evaluated 46 patients with unstable angina (UA), who showed no significant changes in heart rate, blood pressure, and double product (as evidence of increased oxygen demand) during episodes of chest pain. Coronary angiography was performed in all patients during the same hospitalization. Of 26 patients with UA and ST depression (group A), 10 had left main coronary artery disease (CAD) and eight had left main equivalent CAD.
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