Cases reported "Myocardial Ischemia"

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1/50. Transient left posterior hemiblock during myocardial ischemia-eliciting exercise treadmill testing: a report of a case and a critical analysis of the literature.

    We describe a 75-year-old male patient with two-vessel coronary artery disease, who developed transient left posterior hemiblock (LPH) while undergoing an exercise treadmill test (ETT). The intraventricular conduction abnormality initially had the features of alternating LPH, which evolved to stable LPH prior to dissipating, and it occurred at the first minute of recovery. The exercise electrocardiogram and the associated thallium-201 myocardial perfusion scintigraphy (Tl) revealed severe reversible myocardial ischemia. This rare occurrence is discussed in the context of the observed coronary lesions, the distribution of the radionuclide-detected ischemia, and the previous experience from the literature. An insight regarding the low prevalence of transient LPH is afforded, since the described case derives from a series of 2,160 consecutive patients who underwent ETT in conjunction with Tl. Finally, a comment is provided on the complexities of deciphering the specific pathophysiologic mechanism(s) of transient LPH, occurring during ETT.
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2/50. Rotational atherectomy for left anterior descending artery septal perforator stenosis.

    Stenosis in large septal perforators can result in significant clinical ischemia. The distribution of the septal arteries is as large as many more commonly treated branch vessels. The interventricular septal blood supply has been ignored as a target for revascularization due to its inaccessibility for surgical revascularization, and the elastic recoil associated with balloon angioplasty in this location. Rotational atherectomy is a new therapeutic option for revascularization in this previously difficult location. The septal perforator ostium is the most common site of lesions and is functionally a branch ostial stenosis. We describe four cases in which rotational atherectomy was performed in patients with reversible ischemia due to septal artery stenosis. The acute angiographic results were stable, without evidence for immediate recoil. By debulking, facilitated angioplasty can yield stable acute results in this location. The small size of most septal branches and their angulated origin make rotational atherectomy challenging, and cases must be selected carefully. This previously ignored lesion location can be considered for revascularization in patients with suitable lesion and vessel morphology.
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3/50. Multivessel spontaneous coronary artery dissection in a patient with severe systolic hypertension: a possible association. A case report.

    Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) is an uncommon cause of myocardial ischemia and infarction. hypertension has not been associated with SCAD. The authors report multivessel SCAD in an elderly woman with severe systolic hypertension. They postulate that hypertension of this degree may play a pathophysiologic role in the causation of SCAD.
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4/50. Anesthetic management of high-risk cardiac patients undergoing noncardiac surgery under the support of intraaortic balloon pump.

    patients with severely impaired left ventricular function, an uncorrectable coronary artery disease, and a recent myocardial infarction are at high risk of cardiac complications after major noncardiac surgery. We present two patients with extensive three-vessel coronary artery disease who underwent intraperitoneal surgery under the support of intraaortic balloon pump (IABP). In one patient, the IABP was inserted urgently because of the development of chest pain with significant ST depression on arrival in the operating room, and the other patient was managed with prophylactic IABP. There were no intraoperative or postoperative cardiac events in either patient. Thus, IABP should be considered in the perioperative management of patients with severe cardiac diseases.
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5/50. thyrotoxicosis, unstable angina and normal coronary angiogram.

    It is well known that thyrotoxicosis may elicit acute myocardial ischemia even in patients with angiographically normal coronary vessels. The involved mechanisms are not clearly defined although some hypothesis have been suggested. We report a case of a 54-year-old woman affected by Graves' disease with thyrotoxicosis which was referred to our Institute because of unstable angina. During hospitalization a two dimensional echocardiogram, performed during chest discomfort, showed left ventricular apical akinesis and impaired global systolic function. A subsequent coronary angiography revealed normal epicardial vessels. She was successfully treated with high-dose methimazole and propranolol and a repeat echocardiogram evaluation showed normalization of left ventricular systolic function. Six months later, because of the appearance of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, the patient underwent total thyroidectomy and a substitutive therapy with L-T4 (100 micrograms/die) was started. The authors review the possible mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of myocardial ischemia during thyrotoxicosis.
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6/50. Single coronary arteries: two cases with distinct and previously undescribed angiographic patterns.

    Single coronary artery is a rare congenital anomaly, sometimes associated with myocardial ischemia. We present the clinical and angiographic features of two symptomatic patients with documented myocardial ischemia and with distinct and previously undescribed patterns of single right coronary arteries. These cases are new variants of the types R-I and R-II-A, in which the most probable mechanisms of ischemia are the insufficient blood supply, due to the long trajectories of the single arteries and the presence of underdeveloped vessels. Also, our second case presented with a fistulae from the LCX to the left ventricle, which is another determinant of myocardial ischemia.
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7/50. Transient myocardial ischemia may occur following subendometrial vasopressin infiltration.

    A case of transient myocardial ischemia following subendometrial vasopressin infiltration in intractable intra-operative postpartum bleeding due to placenta accreta is described. In our experience, the rate of this side effect is one in 14 patients (rate of 7.1%). We believe that the benefits of the treatment outweigh the risks, since the uterus was saved in all 14 patients. Nevertheless, this case emphasises that extreme precaution is needed with subendometrial vasopressin infiltration. It should be emphasised that the needle must not be within a blood vessel because intravascular injection of vasopressin solution can precipitate acute arterial hypertension, bradycardia and even death. We suggest that local vasopressin infiltration into the placental site is indicated in cases of intractable bleeding at cesarean section after other conventional obstetric and pharmacological maneuvers have failed.
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8/50. Persistent myocardial ischemia after termination of dipyridamole-induced ventricular tachycardia by intravenous aminophylline: scintigraphic demonstration.

    Ventricular tachycardia is a rare complication of dipyridamole stress testing. We present a case in which dipyridamole induced symptomatic ventricular tachycardia. The patient, a 41-year-old man with a history of chest discomfort on exertion for 1 year, underwent dipyridamole thallium imaging. Sustained ventricular tachycardia occurred 1 minute and 40 seconds after completion of the dipyridamole infusion. Intravenous aminophylline (125 mg) was given immediately and the tachycardia was terminated. Two minutes later, thallium-201 was injected and subsequent myocardial imaging showed reversible perfusion defects in the inferior wall, septum, and apex. coronary angiography revealed three-vessel disease. This case discloses that reversible perfusion defects can still be demonstrated on thallium scan in spite of injection of aminophylline, an antagonist of dipyridamole, before thallium administration.
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9/50. Pulmonary sequestration with myocardial ischemia caused by vasospasm and steal.

    We describe patient with a rare pulmonary sequestration with myocardial ischemia in the left coronary artery caused by vasospastic angina and stealing from coronary circulation. The anterior atrial branch from the left circumflex artery gave rise to a large and anomalous vessel in the right posterior lung field. Both the surgical and medical treatment of this pulmonary sequestration improved the control of angina attacks.
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10/50. True-positive exercise electrocardiogram/false-negative thallium-201 scintigram: a proposal of a mechanism for the paradox.

    A 72-year-old man with exertional angina had a strongly positive exercise electrocardiogram (EECG) with a negative thallium-201 myocardial perfusion scintigram (Tl). Arteriography revealed triple-vessel coronary artery disease, for which he underwent aortocoronary bypass grafting. Repeat EECG was negative, and it was again associated with a negative Tl. The false-negative Tl on the first test was felt to be due to a rare phenomenon of homogeneously distributed reversible exercise-induced myocardial ischemia, leading to a uniform radiotracer count density. The even distribution of ischemia would also be expected to render a false-negative EECG, due to electrocardiographic cancellation, and this is frequently the case. However, in the patient presented herein, we propose that the ischemic cardiac apex rendered the EECG strongly positive because its position was not opposed by an ischemic muscular region, and thus an uncancelled ischemic ST-segment vector was generated. This hypothesis is supported by our recent work showing the unique role of the ischemic apex (among all the other myocardial territories) in rendering the EECG positive.
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