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  • Title: Evaluation of adjunctive intracoronary administration of acetylcholine following intravenous infusion of ergonovine to provoke coronary artery spasm.
    Author: Goto A, Ito S, Kondo H, Nomura Y, Yasue N, Suzumura H, Takeda Y, Tomimoto S, Yamada Y, Horio T, Suzuki S, Fukutomi T, Itoh M.
    Journal: J Cardiol; 1999 Dec; 34(6):309-16. PubMed ID: 10642927.
    Abstract:
    A dilemma arises in patients with chest pain or other symptoms suggestive of coronary artery disease but without significant coronary artery stenosis or spasm even after the spasm provocation test by either ergonovine or acetylcholine. Incremental doses of intracoronary acetylcholine (up to 100 micrograms for left coronary artery and 50 micrograms for right coronary artery) were administered when intravenous infusion of ergonovine 0.4 mg showed negative results. A total of 39 patients were studied. Provocation test was performed because of chest pain suggestive of coronary artery disease (n = 19), atypical chest pain (n = 6), post balloon angioplasty status (n = 6), silent ischemia (n = 4), Adams-Stokes syndrome (n = 3), and dead-on-arrival (n = 1). Characteristics of chest pain indicated variant angina (n = 11), rest angina (n = 4), and effort angina (n = 4). No electrocardiographic evidence of ischemia was detected before this test in any patient. Spasm was induced in 23 patients (59.0%) with complete obstruction in 7 (30.4%), diffuse vasoconstriction (90-99%) in 14 (60.9%), and focal spasm in 2 (8.7%). The patients with chest pain showed the highest positive rate of 78.9%. Further, the patients with atypical chest pain and miscellaneous reasons also revealed positive rates of 33.3% and 42.9%, respectively. One ventricular tachycardia and 2 atrial fibrillations occurred but terminated spontaneously. This test is useful for detecting spasm in a variety of patients in whom intravenous ergonovine infusion fails to induce spasm.
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