• Heart and vessels · Mar 2016

    Comparative Study

    Gender differences in sensitivity of acetylcholine and ergonovine to coronary spasm provocation test.

    • Shozo Sueda, Toru Miyoshi, Ysuhiro Sasaki, Tomoki Sakaue, Hirokazu Habara, and Hiroaki Kohno.
    • Department of Cardiology, Ehime Prefectural Niihama Hospital, Hongou 3 choume 1-1, Niihama, Ehime, 792-0042, Japan. EZF03146@nifty.com.
    • Heart Vessels. 2016 Mar 1; 31 (3): 322-9.

    AbstractWe examined the sex difference concerning the coronary artery response between ACh and ER in this study. We already reported the difference of coronary response between acetylcholine (ACh) and ergonovine (ER). We performed both ACh and ER tests of 461 patients (male 294 patients, female 167 patients, mean age 64.4 ± 11.3 years) during 23 years. Positive coronary spasm was defined as >99 % transient luminal narrowing with usual chest pain and/or ischemic ECG changes. Firstly, ACh was administered in incremental doses of 20/50/(80) μg into the RCA and 20/50/100/(200) μg into the LCA over 20 s. Secondly, ER was administered in a total dose of 40 μg into the RCA and of 64 μg into the LCA over 2-4 min. Intracoronary injection of ACh and ER provoked spasm in 221 patients consisting of 160 male patients and 61 female patients. In female patients, the spasm provoked by ACh was almost perfect except in two patients (59 patients, 96.7 %), while ER provoked spasm in only 20 patients (32.8 %). In male patients, provoked spasm by ACh (129 patients, 80.6 %) was significantly higher than ER (97 patients, 60.6 %). As a spasm provocation test, ACh is more sensitive than ER in both sexes and especially in females. We may select two pharmacological agents by sex differences to provoke coronary artery spasm in the cardiac catheterization laboratory in the future.

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