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Title: Echocardiographic documentation of myocardial ischemia in presence of angina pectoris without ST-T changes. Author: Picano E, Distante A, Masini M, Moscarelli E, Lattanzi F, Lombardi M, Morales MA, L'Abbate A. Journal: Can J Cardiol; 1986 Jul; Suppl A():67A-70A. PubMed ID: 3756601. Abstract: A frequent clinical problem is to document the elusive entity of electrocardiographically silent myocardial ischemia. Since echocardiography offers a practical tool to detect reversible mechanical changes due to ischemia, 32 patients with angina on effort, and coronary artery disease, and 15 patients with angina at rest were studied. In all 47 patients electrocardiographic changes during effort or rest pain were inconclusive. Combined 12 lead electrocardiographic and 2-Dimensional echocardiographic monitoring were performed: during ergonovine testing in the 15 patients with angina at rest; during dipyridamole testing in the 32 patients with effort angina and a non diagnostic stress test. Interpretable echocardiograms were obtained in all the patients studied. Positivity of both the Ergonovine-Echocardiographic test and the Dipyridamole-Echocardiographic test was based upon the detection of regional transient asynergy. Of the 15 patients who had chest pain at rest in the absence of diagnostic electrocardiographic changes, Ergonovine-Echocardiographic test was positive in 6 (40%). Of the 32 patients who had chest pain in absence of diagnostic electrocardiographic changes during exercise stress testing, the Dipyridamole-Echocardiographic test was positive in 18 (56%). Echocardiographic monitoring in combination with provocative testing (ergonovine and dipyridamole) may be a practical, non invasive, inexpensive tool which is feasible in all patients with good basal echocardiograms and is able to unmask electrocardiographically silent myocardial ischemia by providing objective mechanical evidence of the ischemic event.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]