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Title: Dose-related effects of intracoronary nitroglycerin on coronary hyperemia in patients with coronary artery disease. Author: Kern MJ, Miller JT, Henry RL. Journal: Am Heart J; 1986 May; 111(5):845-52. PubMed ID: 3085463. Abstract: Although intracoronary nitroglycerin (NTG) is frequently required during percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty or thrombolysis, the dose-related hemodynamic effects and the extent to which intracoronary NTG--induced coronary hyperemia is limited in patients with coronary artery disease have not been defined. Therefore, we studied 19 patients with coronary artery disease (nine with no or minimal luminal narrowing of the left anterior descending coronary artery [group 1] and 10 with significant left anterior descending coronary stenosis [group 2]; mean arterial pressure and thermodilution coronary sinus and great cardiac vein blood flow were measured during bolus administrations of 50, 200, and 300 micrograms of intracoronary NTG. During the NTG-induced hyperemia, mean arterial pressure decreased 0%, 4% (both p = NS), and 6% (p less than 0.05) after 50, 200, and 300 micrograms doses, respectively. heart rate did not change. Global coronary hyperemia was greatest for 200 micrograms with coronary blood flow increasing (74 +/- 32% in group 1 and 53 +/- 25% for group 2) but was significantly different from 50 micrograms only in group 2 patients. Moreover, the regional coronary blood flow responses were attenuated in group 2 compared to group 1 for 50 micrograms, 18 +/- 13% vs 38 +/- 18%, and for 200 micrograms, 35 +/- 15% vs 72 +/- 34% (both p less than 0.05), with the reduction of regional coronary resistance in group 2 attenuated for all three doses of intracoronary NTG. The 300 micrograms dose did not provide further augmentation of either global or regional coronary blood flow or greater reduction in coronary resistance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]