Summary: A 57-year-old woman developed severe substernal chest pain rddiating to the left arm accompanied hy pallor and marked diaphoresis. These symptoms appeared at rest, lasted 45 minutes, and terminated spntaneously. The patient had been treated for mild hypertension during the last 6 months. An ECG tracing obtained at the beginning of treatment was unremarkable. However, an ECG tracing recorded shortly after the end of the symptoms showed T-wave inversion in all anterior leads. Coronary arteriography was then performed and showed no fixed obstructive coronary artery disease. Nonetheless, a lengthened and constricted myocardial bridging of both the left anterior descending coronary artery and its major diagonal branch was detected. Also, he left anterior descending coronary artery was observed very short. terminating before the cardiac apex. The kft ventricle was hypertrophied. The patient was treated with a beta-blocking agent which eliminated all symptoms.ECG tracing obtained about three months after the onset of the clinical picture was nornial. Our findings suggest that marked myocardial ischemia at rest does occur in patients having myocardial bridges under special circumstances, such as lengthened and constricted myocardial bridging of a short coronary artery which supplies a hypertrophied ventricle. This anomaly should be taken into account as a possible cause of a threatened myocardial infarction, which may be successfully treated with a beta-blocking agent.
A middle-aged woman with long-term uncontrolled arterial hypertension developed a clinical picture of impending myocardial infarction. A normal coronary arteriogram was obtained. However, left heart catheterization showed a marked increase in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, while left angiocardiography revealed marked left ventricular hypertrophy. She was successfully treated with a beta-blocking and calcium-antagonist agent. The present case shows that an impending myocardial infarction may occur in patients having normal coronary arteriogram but with left ventricular hypertrophy secondary to arterial hypertension.
Coronary recanalization with thrombolytic agents is a new therapeutic approach to the treatment of acute myocardial infarction that can be beneficial even to patients in cardiogenic shock. Although few cases have been reported in the literature, treatment of acute occlusion of the left main coronary artery (LMCA) has been made possible by myocardial reperfusion. This communication concerns a patient with acute LMCA occlusion who was successfully treated by thrombolytic therapy with streptokinase followed by revascularization of the myocardium seventy-two hours after reperfusion was achieved.
Summary:A 55-year-old Caucasian woman suddenly developed substernal chest pain at rest accompanied by pallor, diaphoresis, nausea, and vomiting. Physical examination was otherwise unremarkable. The resting ECG showed T-wave inversion in all anterior leads which returned to normal 24 h after the onset of the symptoms. The pain was eliminated promptly by sublingual isosorbide dinitrate. ''Impending' * acute myocardial infarction was diagnosed. Coronary arteriography , however, failed to reveal any change in any major coronary artery but an apical aneurysm of the left ventricle was detected. As the complement-fixation test for Chagas' disease was positive, the diagnosis of chronic Chagas' heart disease was then established. This unusual clinical manifestation of Chagas' disease is thought to be the consequence of a transient imbalance in the cardiac autonomic nervous system, which is considered to play a central role in the pathogenesis of chronic Chagas' heart disease. In addition, the present case may alert clinicians to the thus far neglected atypical chest pain, which is frequently seen in chagasic patients but whose etiology remains obscure.
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