Coronary artery disease
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Coronary artery disease · Jun 2000
ReviewBeta-blockers, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, and calcium antagonists in treatment of elderly patients with acute myocardial infarction.
Administration of beta-blockers reduces mortality among old persons during and after acute myocardial infarction. The American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines recommend that persons without contraindications to use of beta-blockers should be administered beta-blockers within a few days of myocardial infarction (if administration is not initiated acutely) and that their administration should be continued indefinitely. ⋯ If patients have persistent angina pectoris after myocardial infarction despite treatment with beta-blockers and nitrates or hypertension inadequately controlled by other drugs, administration of a nondihydropyridine calcium antagonist such as verapamil or diltiazem should be added to the therapeutic regimen if the LVEF is normal. If the LVEF is abnormal, administration of amlodipine or felodipine should be added to the therapeutic regimen.
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Coronary artery disease · Mar 2000
Clinical TrialCoronary risk profiles in men with coronary artery disease: effects of body composition, fat distribution, age and fitness.
Few studies have investigated the influence of body composition, abdominal obesity, age and fitness on coronary risk factors in populations of patients with coronary heart disease (CHD). We investigated whether abdominal obesity or generalized adiposity is a better predictor of cardiovascular risk in men with coronary artery disease (CAD), and the effects of exercise training on coronary risk factors in younger and older patients with CAD. ⋯ In men with CAD, general measures of obesity, such as body weight, body mass index, and fat mass are better predictors of coronary risk factors than body fat distribution. Younger and older men with CAD experienced similar improvements in body composition and body fat distribution after an exercise training program.
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Coronary artery disease · Jun 1999
The effects of dipyridamole stress test on plasma levels of soluble adhesion molecules intracellular adhesion molecule-1, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, E-selectin and L-selectin in patients with ischemic heart disease and patients with syndrome X.
Adhesion of activated leukocytes to the endothelium as a result of myocardial ischemia/reperfusion has been shown to be involved in the development of tissue injury. Leukocyte adhesion to the endothelium occurs via adhesion molecules expressed on the surface of both cell types. Upon cell activation these proteins may be released into the circulation and measured in a soluble form. ⋯ In patients with IHD, administration of dipyridamole induces myocardial ischemia resulting in modification of plasma levels of the soluble adhesion molecules.
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Coronary artery disease · Jan 1999
Comparative StudyCoronary stenting for unstable angina: predictors of 30-day and long-term clinical outcome.
Unstable angina is usually caused by acute thrombosis superimposed on a fissured plaque. Coronary artery stenting has been shown to improve short- and long-term results of coronary angioplasty in mainly stable patients with one-vessel disease, but it is uncertain whether its use in an unstable clinical setting can be safe and useful. This study sought to evaluate the results of coronary stenting in unstable angina and to determine patient, lesion and procedure-related predictors of 30-day and long-term ischemic events. ⋯ This study demonstrates that, either electively or after failure of conventional angioplasty, coronary stenting represents an effective therapy for patients with unstable angina. In the same clinical setting, combined antiplatelet therapy is associated with a lower 30-day stent thrombosis rate than anticoagulant therapy. Bailout stenting, anticoagulant therapy, implantation of stents longer than 15 mm were shown to be predictors of 30-day ischemic events, whereas multivessel coronary artery disease and stent application with small balloon size were predictive of long-term ischemic events.