S B Freedman1, C K Wong. 1. Department of Cardiology, Concord Repatriation General Hospital, Sydney, Australia. ben@card.crg.cs.nsw.gov.au
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the usual triggers of silent and symptomatic ischaemia. DESIGN: Patients wore an ambulatory recorder for 48 hours. The device emitted a tone on detection of ischaemia and patients noted activities, feelings, and symptoms so that ischaemia could be attributed to one of four triggers: physical stress, mental stress, combined physical/mental stress, or no stressor. SETTING: Home environment. PATIENTS: Patients (n = 38) with stable coronary disease, positive exercise electrocardiography, and ischaemic episodes on ambulatory electrocardiography. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Matching ischaemic episodes with perceived triggers. RESULTS: Altogether 257 ischaemic episodes (53% silent) were documented. Triggers were: physical stress, 56%; mental stress, 5%; combined physical/mental stress, 8%; no identifiable trigger, 31%. Episodes associated with mental or no stress were more often silent (69% and 75%, respectively) than those associated with physical stress (45%, p < 0.01), while combined physical/mental stress episodes were usually symptomatic (10% silent, p < 0.01 v other stressors). Although physical stress was less commonly a trigger of silent ischaemia than angina (47% v 65%, p < 0.01), it was still the predominant trigger of silent ischaemia. There was no identifiable trigger in 45% of silent and only 17% of anginal episodes (p < 0.01). Only nine silent episodes involved mental stress alone as a trigger. CONCLUSIONS: Daily life ischaemia is usually triggered by physical activity. Mental stress alone is an uncommon trigger of either silent or symptomatic ischaemia, while combined physical/mental stress is a significant but minor trigger of angina. Patients can identify a trigger in 83% of anginal episodes, compared with only half of silent ischaemic episodes.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the usual triggers of silent and symptomatic ischaemia. DESIGN:Patients wore an ambulatory recorder for 48 hours. The device emitted a tone on detection of ischaemia and patients noted activities, feelings, and symptoms so that ischaemia could be attributed to one of four triggers: physical stress, mental stress, combined physical/mental stress, or no stressor. SETTING: Home environment. PATIENTS: Patients (n = 38) with stable coronary disease, positive exercise electrocardiography, and ischaemic episodes on ambulatory electrocardiography. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Matching ischaemic episodes with perceived triggers. RESULTS: Altogether 257 ischaemic episodes (53% silent) were documented. Triggers were: physical stress, 56%; mental stress, 5%; combined physical/mental stress, 8%; no identifiable trigger, 31%. Episodes associated with mental or no stress were more often silent (69% and 75%, respectively) than those associated with physical stress (45%, p < 0.01), while combined physical/mental stress episodes were usually symptomatic (10% silent, p < 0.01 v other stressors). Although physical stress was less commonly a trigger of silent ischaemia than angina (47% v 65%, p < 0.01), it was still the predominant trigger of silent ischaemia. There was no identifiable trigger in 45% of silent and only 17% of anginal episodes (p < 0.01). Only nine silent episodes involved mental stress alone as a trigger. CONCLUSIONS: Daily life ischaemia is usually triggered by physical activity. Mental stress alone is an uncommon trigger of either silent or symptomatic ischaemia, while combined physical/mental stress is a significant but minor trigger of angina. Patients can identify a trigger in 83% of anginal episodes, compared with only half of silent ischaemic episodes.
Authors: A Rozanski; C N Bairey; D S Krantz; J Friedman; K J Resser; M Morell; S Hilton-Chalfen; L Hestrin; J Bietendorf; D S Berman Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 1988-04-21 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: K Kinjo; H Sato; H Sato; I Shiotani; T Kurotobi; Y Ohnishi; E Hishida; D Nakatani; H Mizuno; Y Yamada; S Fukui; M Fukunami; S Nanto; Y Matsu-ura; H Takeda; M Hori Journal: Heart Date: 2003-04 Impact factor: 5.994