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Title: Role of myocardial oxygen demand in the pathogenesis of silent ischemia during daily life. Author: Deedwania PC, Carbajal EV. Journal: Am J Cardiol; 1992 Nov 16; 70(16):19F-24F. PubMed ID: 1442597. Abstract: The role of myocardial oxygen demand in the pathogenesis of silent ambulatory myocardial ischemia was evaluated by reviewing and assessing the methods and results of recent studies. The performance of simultaneous ambulatory electrocardiographic and blood pressure monitoring in 25 men with proven coronary artery disease (CAD) revealed significant increases in heart rate and blood pressure (p < 0.001) preceding most silent ischemic events. By plotting the mean heart rate obtained at 5-minute intervals during the 30 minutes before an ischemic event, the ischemic heart rate was shown to be significantly higher (95 +/- 15 vs 74 +/- 11 beats per minute [bpm]; p < 0.01) than the nonischemic heart rate. The evaluation of heart rate changes during ambulatory ischemia (in patients with CAD and ischemia induced by an exercise test using gradual work load increments) showed a significant heart rate increase (> 10 bpm) at 1-5 minutes preceding the onset of ST-segment depression. Heart rate increases during exercise testing according to the gradual work load increments of the National Institutes of Health protocol were compared with the heart rate preceding ischemic events during daily life monitored by ambulatory electrocardiography and were found to be closely related. In contrast, heart rate increases that occurred during exercise testing using the standard Bruce protocol were higher and correlated less with those preceding ischemia in daily life. Heart rate and blood pressure increased significantly in most silent ischemic episodes, indicating that increased myocardial oxygen demand plays a significant role in the pathogenesis of myocardial ischemia during daily life.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]