Literature DB >> 6709793

Chest pain with normal coronary arteries: a comparative study of psychiatric and social morbidity.

C Bass, C Wade.   

Abstract

Ninety-nine patients with chest pain and a presumptive diagnosis of coronary heart disease were assessed blindly within 24 hours of angiography, using standardized psychiatric and social interviews and a personality inventory. Thirty-one patients had normal coronary arteries (NCA), 15 had slight disease and 53 had significant coronary obstruction. Twenty-eight (61%) of the 46 patients with insignificant disease and 12 (23%) of the 53 with significant obstruction had psychiatric morbidity. Associations between the overall severity of psychiatric morbidity and measures of social maladjustment were strongest in the patients with normal coronary arteries. The 26 men with insignificant coronary artery disease had higher scores of neuroticism and extraversion than the 41 with important coronary occlusions. No differences were observed when the same comparisons were made for the women. The findings indicate that approximately two thirds of patients with normal and near-normal coronary arteries have predominantly psychiatric rather than cardiac disorders: the symptoms in these patients are more likely to represent the somatic manifestations of anxiety and overbreathing than the consequences of underlying cardiac disease. Physicians should be aware of the ways in which neurotic illness may present with symptoms mimicking cardiac disease, especially when cardiovascular symptoms are accompanied by phobic symptoms and unexplained shortness of breath.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6709793     DOI: 10.1017/s003329170000307x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Med        ISSN: 0033-2917            Impact factor:   7.723


  23 in total

1.  Cardiac exposure history as a determinant of symptoms and emergency department utilization in noncardiac chest pain patients.

Authors:  J E Aikens; E Michael; T Levin; T C Myers; E Lowry; L M McCracken
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  1999-12

2.  Exertional gastroesophageal reflux.

Authors:  J B Chambers; W N Gardner; G Jackson; C Bass
Journal:  Br Med J (Clin Res Ed)       Date:  1987-08-01

3.  Oesophageal motility disorders in patients with psychiatric disease.

Authors:  J Roland; H Dhaenen; H R Ham; O Peters; A Piepsz
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med       Date:  1996-12

4.  Neuroticism, symptom reports, and type A behavior: interpretive cautions for the Framingham Scale.

Authors:  T W Smith; J L O'Keeffe; K D Allred
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  1989-02

5.  Successful medical and psychological management of recurring chest pain and frequent hospital admissions in a patient with coronary artery disease.

Authors:  G H Gordon; L H Baker; J Boverman
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1994-04

Review 6.  Antidepressants for functional gastrointestinal syndromes.

Authors:  R E Clouse
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  1994-11       Impact factor: 3.199

7.  Noncardiac chest pain: epidemiology, natural course and pathogenesis.

Authors:  Ronnie Fass; Sami R Achem
Journal:  J Neurogastroenterol Motil       Date:  2011-04-27       Impact factor: 4.924

8.  Clinical presentation and functional prognosis in syndrome X.

Authors:  A Chauhan; P A Mullins; S I Thuraisingham; M C Petch; P M Schofield
Journal:  Br Heart J       Date:  1993-10

9.  Quality of life in patients with non-CAD chest pain: associations to fear of pain and psychiatric disorder severity.

Authors:  Katherine Hadlandsmyth; Kamila S White; Ronald J Krone
Journal:  J Clin Psychol Med Settings       Date:  2013-09

10.  Health care utilisation in patients with non-cardiac chest pain: a longitudinal analysis of chest pain, anxiety and interoceptive fear.

Authors:  Katherine Hadlandsmyth; Diane L Rosenbaum; Jennifer M Craft; Ernest V Gervino; Kamila S White
Journal:  Psychol Health       Date:  2013-01-24
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