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Journal ArticleDOI

Altered adrenergic activity in coronary arterial spasm: insight into mechanism based on study of coronary hemodynamics and the electrocardiogram.

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TLDR
Observations suggest that alterations in the sympathetic nervous system that are consistent with asymmetric stellate ganglion activity and transient alpha adrenergic receptor stimulation can presage the development of coronary arterial spasm in some patients with variant angina pectoris.
Abstract
To elucidate the pathophysiologic mechanism of coronary arterial spasm, the hypothesis was examined that underlying alterations in sympathetic activity may account for this syndrome in some patients Observations were directed to alterations in coronary arterial hemodynamics and the electrocardiogram Spasm of the left anterior descending coronary artery produced a mean increase in coronary vascular resistance of 107 percent (P less than 005) in four patients in whom coronary sinus blood flow was measured with the thermodilution technique The alpha adrenergic blocking agent phentolamine, given intravenously, acutely reversed coronary spasm and its clinical manifestations in eight patients and reduced coronary resistance In four patients, administration of the long-acting oral alpha blocking agent phenoxybenzamine (20 to 80 mg/day) caused disappearance of symptoms during a follow-up period of 3 to 12 months Transient prolongation of the corrected Q-T interval preceded spontaneous or ergonovine maleate-provoked coronary spasm in 11 patients with variant angina pectoris, whereas no significant change in the Q-T interval followed ergonovine administration in 27 control patients with atypical chest pain who did not have coronary spasm T wave inversions in the resting electrocardiogram were normalized by isoproterenol infusion in one patient and by long-term phenoxybenzamine treatment in four patients with variant angina pectoris These Q-T and T wave changes are analogous to those described with unilateral or asymmetric stellate ganglion stimulation in animals These observations suggest that alterations in the sympathetic nervous system that are consistent with asymmetric stellate ganglion activity and transient alpha adrenergic receptor stimulation can presage the development of coronary arterial spasm in some patients with variant angina pectoris

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Guidelines on the management of stable angina pectoris: executive summary: the task force on the management of stable angina pectoris of the European society of cardiology.

TL;DR: The guidelines lean on the taskforce report on CVD prevention suggesting ‘considering a lower threshold for institution of pharmacological therapy for hypertension (130/85) for patients with established coronary heart disease’.
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Exacerbation of vasotonic angina pectoris by propranolol.

TL;DR: It is concluded that propranolol at doses up to 160 mg every 6 hours as single therapy is frequently detrimental in angina pectoris due to coronary artery spasm and should not be used as the sole treatment of this disorder.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is Variant Angina the Coronary Manifestation of a Generalized Vasospastic Disorder

TL;DR: Altered adrenergic activity has been proposed as the cause of coronary spasm and high circulation-related myocardial ischemia is caused by transient coronary-arterial spasm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Local coronary supersensitivity to diverse vasoconstrictive stimuli in patients with variant angina.

TL;DR: Results suggest that in patients with variant angina, a local nonspecific supersensitivity rather than an abnormal specific agonist-receptor interaction plays a major role in the genesis of coronary arterial spasm.
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Les Torsades de Pointes: An Unusual Ventricular Arrhythmia

TL;DR: Electrophysiologic studies so far favor a re-entrant cause for the arrhythmia, but the exact mechanism and its true relation to both conventional ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation remain to be defined.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement of Coronary Sinus Blood Flow by Continuous Thermodilution in Man

TL;DR: The method allowed continuous measurement of flow over a period of several minutes and, for the first time, measurement of rapid changes in myocardial perfusion.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Measurement of the Q-T Interval of the Electrocardiogram

TL;DR: If these criteria are used, the true corrected Q-T duration in hypopotassemia without hypocalcemia is not prolonged, but normal or shortened, corresponding to an earlier appearance of the second heart sound.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coronary arterial spasm in Prinzmetal angina. Documentation by coronary arteriography.

TL;DR: Coronary arteriography should be attempted, if possible, during clinical attacks of pain in patients with Prinzmetal angina, even those who have a focal atherosclerotic obstruction may have additional distal coronary arterial spasm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional distribution of right and left stellate innervation to the ventricles

TL;DR: The electrocardiographic form changes observed following unilateral alteration of sympathetic tone paralleled those electrocardsiographic abnormalities seen in patients with lesions of the central nervous system, suggesting a possible functional explanation for these clinical findings.
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