Title of article :
Impact of daily life myocardial ischemia in patients with chronic reversible and irreversible myocardial dysfunction
Author/Authors :
Wiggers، نويسنده , , Henrik and Bّttcher، نويسنده , , Morten and Egeblad، نويسنده , , Henrik and Mّlgaard، نويسنده , , Henning and Nielsen، نويسنده , , Torsten Toftegaard and Bّtker، نويسنده , , Hans Erik، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages :
7
From page :
22
To page :
28
Abstract :
Repetitive myocardial ischemia during daily life has been suggested as the underlying mechanism of reversible myocardial dysfunction, which may progress into a hibernating state. Thirty-seven patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy (ejection fraction 35 ± 7%) underwent positron emission tomography (N-13 ammonia and 18-F-fluoro-2-deoxy-glucose [FDG]) and exercise testing before coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and 48- hour ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring to detect ischemia before CABG and 6 months postoperatively. Reversibility of regional myocardial dysfunction was detected by echocardiographic follow-up at 5 days, 2 months, and 6 months after the operation. Preoperatively, ischemic episodes during daily activities were more common (2 [25th to 75th percentiles 0 to 4] vs 0 episodes, p <0.01) and duration of ischemia longer (9 [25th to 75th percentiles 0 to 37] vs 0 [25th to 75th percentiles 0 to 1] minutes, p <0.02) in patients with reversible dysfunction (n = 15) than in patients with irreversible dysfunction (n = 22). The number of ischemic episodes per patient correlated with the numbers of reversibly dysfunctional segments (p = 0.003), viable segments as seen by positron emission tomography (p <0.05), and flow-metabolic mismatch segments (p <0.05). CABG eliminated ambulatory ischemic episodes in patients with reversible dysfunction (0 episodes, p <0.05 vs before CABG). Preoperatively, all patients with reversible dysfunction had a positive exercise test (14 of 15 patients), whereas daily life ischemia was present in 60% of patients. Reversibly dysfunctional segments in patients with ambulatory ischemia had faster recovery of function (15 of 28 patients vs 2 of 12 patients recovered at 5 days, p <0.05), higher FDG uptake (0.86 ± 0.19% vs 0.71 ± 0.24%, p <0.05) than in patients without ambulatory ischemia, whereas perfusion was similar (0.63 ± 0.20 and 0.62 ± 0.19 ml/g/min). Thus, exercise-induced myocardial ischemia is associated with reversibility of myocardial dysfunction, but not all patients with reversible ischemic cardiomyopathy have ischemic attacks during daily life.
Journal title :
American Journal of Cardiology
Serial Year :
2002
Journal title :
American Journal of Cardiology
Record number :
1893386
Link To Document :
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