Literature DB >> 17627185

Ischemia in women with angina and normal coronary angiograms.

Amalia Peix1, Ernesto J García, Juan Valiente, Francisco Tornés, Lázaro O Cabrera, Beatriz Cabalé, Regla Carrillo, David García-Barreto.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Coronary artery disease is frequent in postmenopausal women. Myocardial ischemia has been induced with stress testing, and a relationship between endothelial dysfunction and perfusion defects has been reported.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether myocardial ischemia can be evidenced both by perfusion and function abnormalities using gated single-photon emission computed-tomography myocardial scintigraphy with technetium-labeled compounds in women with typical angina, normal coronary angiography, and endothelial dysfunction. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Fifty-nine postmenopausal patients were studied. Each underwent technetium-99m methoxy-isobutyl-isonitrile myocardial scintigraphy (protocol: exercise stress-rest), brachial artery endothelial function measured by ultrasonography, lipidogram, and 24-h ambulatory ECG recording (Holter). Twenty-one patients (group I) showed perfusion defects in myocardial scintigraphy, whereas the other 38 patients (group II) did not. Group I patients exhibited endothelial dysfunction more frequently (57 vs. 29%) than those of group II. Among group I patients, 12 showed a reversible perfusion defect that, in 75% of the cases, was associated with poststress left ventricular ejection fraction reduction greater than 5% and a regional hypokinesis. Nine patients had fixed defects, which in 56% of the cases were associated with poststress left ventricular ejection fraction reduction greater than 5%. Left ventricular ejection fraction poststress minus left ventricular ejection fraction at rest was -5.2% in group I patients versus -1.8% in group II (P<0.001). Three patients in group I showed evidence of ischemia by Holter compared with four in group II.
CONCLUSION: Stress-induced ischemia is associated with poststress left ventricular ejection fraction reduction in postmenopausal women with typical angina, normal coronary angiography, and a trend toward abnormal endothelial-mediated vasodilation.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17627185     DOI: 10.1097/MCA.0b013e3281689a3f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Coron Artery Dis        ISSN: 0954-6928            Impact factor:   1.439


  3 in total

1.  The utility of cardiopulmonary exercise testing in the assessment of suspected microvascular ischemia.

Authors:  Sundeep Chaudhry; Ross Arena; Karlman Wasserman; James E Hansen; Gregory D Lewis; Jonathan Myers; Romualdo Belardinelli; Brian LaBudde; Nicholas Menasco; William E Boden
Journal:  Int J Cardiol       Date:  2009-02-23       Impact factor: 4.164

2.  Exercise-induced myocardial ischemia detected by cardiopulmonary exercise testing.

Authors:  Sundeep Chaudhry; Ross Arena; Karlman Wasserman; James E Hansen; Gregory D Lewis; Jonathan Myers; Nicolas Chronos; William E Boden
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  2009-01-17       Impact factor: 2.778

Review 3.  Coronary microvascular dysfunction in women: an overview of diagnostic strategies.

Authors:  Sujith Kuruvilla; Christopher M Kramer
Journal:  Expert Rev Cardiovasc Ther       Date:  2013-11
  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.