Cases reported "Myocardial Ischemia"

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1/111. Transient left posterior hemiblock during myocardial ischemia-eliciting exercise treadmill testing: a report of a case and a critical analysis of the literature.

    We describe a 75-year-old male patient with two-vessel coronary artery disease, who developed transient left posterior hemiblock (LPH) while undergoing an exercise treadmill test (ETT). The intraventricular conduction abnormality initially had the features of alternating LPH, which evolved to stable LPH prior to dissipating, and it occurred at the first minute of recovery. The exercise electrocardiogram and the associated thallium-201 myocardial perfusion scintigraphy (Tl) revealed severe reversible myocardial ischemia. This rare occurrence is discussed in the context of the observed coronary lesions, the distribution of the radionuclide-detected ischemia, and the previous experience from the literature. An insight regarding the low prevalence of transient LPH is afforded, since the described case derives from a series of 2,160 consecutive patients who underwent ETT in conjunction with Tl. Finally, a comment is provided on the complexities of deciphering the specific pathophysiologic mechanism(s) of transient LPH, occurring during ETT.
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ranking = 1
keywords = stable
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2/111. Rotational atherectomy for left anterior descending artery septal perforator stenosis.

    Stenosis in large septal perforators can result in significant clinical ischemia. The distribution of the septal arteries is as large as many more commonly treated branch vessels. The interventricular septal blood supply has been ignored as a target for revascularization due to its inaccessibility for surgical revascularization, and the elastic recoil associated with balloon angioplasty in this location. Rotational atherectomy is a new therapeutic option for revascularization in this previously difficult location. The septal perforator ostium is the most common site of lesions and is functionally a branch ostial stenosis. We describe four cases in which rotational atherectomy was performed in patients with reversible ischemia due to septal artery stenosis. The acute angiographic results were stable, without evidence for immediate recoil. By debulking, facilitated angioplasty can yield stable acute results in this location. The small size of most septal branches and their angulated origin make rotational atherectomy challenging, and cases must be selected carefully. This previously ignored lesion location can be considered for revascularization in patients with suitable lesion and vessel morphology.
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ranking = 2
keywords = stable
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3/111. myocardial ischemia resulting from spontaneous dissection in a patient with massive bilateral sinus of valsalva aneurysms.

    We describe a patient with large sinus of valsalva aneurysms involving both the left and right coronary sinuses. Spontaneous dissection of the left coronary artery occurred, causing unstable angina, a complication heretofore not associated with this disease. Successful surgical reconstruction of the aortic root, aortic valve replacement, and coronary bypass grafting were performed. pathology revealed cystic medial necrosis.
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ranking = 4825.3399011026
keywords = stable angina, angina, stable
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4/111. Anomalous origin of a coronary artery in a transplanted heart.

    Upon routine coronary angiography one year after surgery in a 62-year-old male recipient of a heart transplant, an abnormal origin of the left anterior descending coronary artery from the pulmonary artery was found in the donor heart. This very rare congenital anomaly had not been detected during harvesting and transplantation of the heart, and to our knowledge it has never been described before in a heart transplant patient. The donor was a 43-year-old male who died of a spontaneous intracranial bleeding. The recipient continues to enjoy a normal functional capacity and is free of anginal complaints, though there is evidence of ischaemia in the left anterior descending artery territory on exercise thallium-201 myocardial perfusion imaging.
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ranking = 1119.9258029728
keywords = angina
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5/111. Vasospastic angina likely related to cisplatin-containing chemotherapy and thoracic irradiation for lung cancer.

    Vasospastic angina is rarely observed during cancer treatment. The present report describes two males with lung cancer, aged 73 and 61, who developed vasospastic angina during combination treatment of cisplatin-containing chemotherapy and thoracic irradiation. As both patients have smoked and their ages are typical for patients with coronary artery disease, such events may be incidental. However, oncologists should be aware of the possible development of myocardial ischemia during or following administration of antineoplastic agents, especially in elderly patients with pre-existing coronary risk factors or a history of thoracic radiotherapy.
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ranking = 6719.5548178368
keywords = angina
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6/111. The nondiagnostic ECG in the chest pain patient: normal and nonspecific initial ECG presentations of acute MI.

    The 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) is a powerful clinical tool used in the evaluation of chest pain patients, assisting in the selection of the proper therapy. Unfortunately, the ECG is diagnostic of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in only one-half of such patients at initial hospital evaluation. In the remaining group of patients with the nondiagnostic 12-lead electrocardiogram, the ECG may be entirely normal, show nonspecific sinus tachycardia (ST) segment-T wave abnormalities, or obvious ischemic changes. In adult chest pain patients treated in the emergency department (ED), 1% to 4% of such patients with an absolutely normal ECG had a final hospital diagnosis of AMI; furthermore, patients with nonspecific electrocardiographic abnormalities experienced AMI in 4% of cases. These findings reinforce the teaching point that the history is the most important tool used in the evaluation of chest pain patients. Furthermore, overreliance on a normal or nonspecifically abnormal ECG in a patient with a classic description of anginal chest pain is dangerous.
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ranking = 1119.9258029728
keywords = angina
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7/111. Unusual congenital coronary anomaly and myocardial ischaemia.

    Angiography was used to diagnose a rare congenital coronary anomaly with myocardial ischaemia in a woman with typical angina. All three coronary arteries arose from a solitary coronary ostium in the right aortic sinus; the left anterior descending coronary artery followed a septal course, the circumflex coronary artery ran behind the ascending aorta, and the right coronary artery followed a normal course. No significant coronary lumen narrowing was found. Transoesophageal echocardiography confirmed the anomalous origin and course of the aberrant coronary arteries. An exercise test reproduced angina, and ECG changes and myocardial perfusion study showed an anterior reversible defect. In contrast to previous reports, myocardial ischaemia was associated with the septal (intramuscular) course of the left anterior descending coronary artery; there was no other significant coronary artery disease.
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ranking = 2239.8516059456
keywords = angina
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8/111. An uncommon case of variant angina.

    This case report describes a 48-year-old woman patient with variant angina who died because of severe myocardial ischemia and cardiogenic shock, in spite of chronic therapy with nitrates and calcium-antagonists and acute intravenous administration of nitrates, calcium-antagonists and tissue-type plasminogen activator. Her Holter monitoring showed a reduction of time domain measures of heart rate variability. The hemodynamic study exhibited a normal ventriculography and angiographically normal epicardial coronary arteries. The provocative testing, performed (during intravenous therapy with nitrates and diltiazem) by intracoronary injection of progressively increasing doses of ergonovine, induced only a mild vasoconstriction of proximal left anterior descending artery, without symptoms or ST-T segment changes. This case reminds us that variant angina can be a lethal disease, confirms that a negative result of intracoronary ergonovine testing performed during intravenous therapy with nitrates and calcium-antagonists does not assure the prevention of new episodes during chronic oral therapy with the same drugs, suggests a possible prognostic value of the reduction of heart rate variability indexes and shows an unusual response to nitrate administration.
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ranking = 6719.5548178368
keywords = angina
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9/111. Acute thrombotic-ischemic coronary syndromes: the usefulness of TEC.

    Transluminal extraction catheter (TEC) is a percutaneous device that performs simultaneous thrombus aspiration and plaque excision. Clinical indications for its application are acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina, and stable angina caused by atherosclerotic, thrombotic lesions located within native coronary arteries and degenerated saphenous vein grafts. The device is useful in management of ischemic patients with contraindications to either pharmacologic thrombolytics or platelet GPIIb/IIIa receptor inhibitors, and can also effectively be used in combination with these agents. A successful TEC procedure requires careful patient selection, strict adherence to recommended indications, optimal equipment selection, familiarity with mechanical components of the device, full understanding of safe and efficacious techniques for deployment and activation, as well as recognition of unique associated angiographic manifestations such as the "empty-pouch phenomenon." As with other debulking devices, the incidence of restenosis post-TEC appears to be directly related to acute luminal gain at the time of procedure and therefore requires the need for adjunct stenting. This communication describes and illustrates various clinical, technical, and angiographic aspects of TEC procedure in patients with acute ischemic-thrombotic coronary syndromes. Cathet. Cardiovasc. Intervent. 48:406-420, 1999.
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ranking = 9650.6798022052
keywords = stable angina, angina, stable
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10/111. thyrotoxicosis, unstable angina and normal coronary angiogram.

    It is well known that thyrotoxicosis may elicit acute myocardial ischemia even in patients with angiographically normal coronary vessels. The involved mechanisms are not clearly defined although some hypothesis have been suggested. We report a case of a 54-year-old woman affected by Graves' disease with thyrotoxicosis which was referred to our Institute because of unstable angina. During hospitalization a two dimensional echocardiogram, performed during chest discomfort, showed left ventricular apical akinesis and impaired global systolic function. A subsequent coronary angiography revealed normal epicardial vessels. She was successfully treated with high-dose methimazole and propranolol and a repeat echocardiogram evaluation showed normalization of left ventricular systolic function. Six months later, because of the appearance of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, the patient underwent total thyroidectomy and a substitutive therapy with L-T4 (100 micrograms/die) was started. The authors review the possible mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of myocardial ischemia during thyrotoxicosis.
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ranking = 24126.699505513
keywords = stable angina, angina, stable
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