Invasive Doppler catheter-derived coronary flow reserve, echocardiographic measurements of left ventricular hypertrophy and intravenous dipyridamole-limited stress thallium-201 scintigraphy were compared in 48 patients (40 were hypertensive or diabetic) with clinical ischemic heart disease and no or minor coronary artery disease. Abnormal vasodilator reserve (ratio less than 3:1) occurred in 50% of the study group and markedly abnormal reserve (less than or equal to 2:1) occurred in 27%. Coronary vasodilator reserve was significantly lower (2.2 +/- 0.8 versus 3.5 +/- 1.3, p = 0.003) and indexed left ventricular mass significantly higher (152.6 +/- 42.2 versus 113.6 +/- 24.0 g, p = 0.0007) in patients with a positive (n = 11) versus a negative (n = 32) thallium perfusion scan. Coronary flow reserve was linearly related in coronary basal flow velocity as follows: y = -0.17x + 4.59; r = -0.57; p = 0.00002. The decrement in flow reserve was not linearly related to the degree of left ventricular hypertrophy. Abnormal vasodilator reserve subsets found in hypertensive patients were defined on the basis of basal flow velocity, indexed left ventricular mass and clinical factors. In this series, diabetes did not cause a detectable additional decrement in flow reserve above that found with hypertension alone. These findings demonstrate that thallium perfusion defects are associated with depressed coronary vasodilator reserve in hypertensive patients without obstructive coronary artery disease. Left ventricular hypertrophy by indexed mass criteria is predictive of which hypertensive patients are likely to have thallium defects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Despite angiographically normal coronary arteries, heterogeneous vasomotor responses (dilation and constriction) were demonstrated in contiguous conduit and resistance arteries in normotensive and hypertensive patients referred for cardiac catheterization because of chest pain. In addition to more severe endothelial dysfunction among conduit and resistance arteries, a greater frequency of discordant conduit and resistance artery responses and resistance vessel constriction was found with increasing severity of hypertension. Our study suggests differing mechanisms of endothelium responsiveness to ACh among conduit and resistance coronary arteries.
Patients with chest pain/ischemic cardiac disease and normal coronary arteriography are thought to have a benign prognosis despite diminished quality of life. Many patients with hypertension fall into this group, at least in the early stage of their disease. Whether abnormalities in coronary flow reserve in these patients are associated with increased morbidity and mortality is unknown. One hundred sixty-eight patients with chest pain/ischemic cardiac disease and normal coronary angiograms who underwent invasive measures of coronary flow reserve were followed longitudinally. Mortality and quality of life were ascertained by query of the national death index and telephone administration of standardized questionnaires. Patient follow-up occurred at a mean of 8.5 years. In the abnormal coronary flow reserve group, 12 deaths (20%) were documented in 60 patients compared with eight out of 108 patients (7%; p=0.016) with normal coronary flow reserve. Coronary flow reserve did not predict impairment in functional health status in long-term follow-up. Thus, invasive measures of coronary flow reserve in patients with chest pain/ischemic cardiac disease and normal coronary angiograms predicted increased mortality. Surviving patients with chest pain/ischemic cardiac disease and normal coronary angiograms have significant morbidity.
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