Invasive treatment in post-AMI patients with inducible ischemia results in a reduction in the incidence of reinfarction, fewer admissions due to unstable angina, and lower prevalence of stable angina. We conclude that patients with inducible ischemia before discharge who have received treatment with thrombolytic drugs for their first AMI should be referred to coronary arteriography and revascularized accordingly.
In cardiac patients requiring supplementary oxygen, the respiratory abnormality could, in our model, be best described by an increased Rdiff, not by an increased shunt value.
Sixty coronary artery bypass grafting patients were randomized to receive either magnesium sulphate or placebo for 4 days postoperatively. The magnesium substitution reduced the duration of atrial fibrillation or flutter (p < 0.05), but not the number of patients developing these arrhythmias. The number of ventricular ectopic beats was also reduced among patients receiving magnesium sulphate compared to placebo (p < 0.05). To evaluate whether the anti-arrhythmic effect of magnesium sulphate was explained by a faster resumption of cellular potassium postoperatively, skeletal muscle electrolyte concentrations were measured pre-operatively and on the third day postoperatively. No significant difference was found in skeletal muscle potassium or magnesium contents on the third day postoperatively when comparing the two groups. The serum magnesium level declined postoperatively in the placebo group, whereas an increase was found in patients receiving magnesium sulphate. We suggest magnesium substitution as a routine postoperatively, because this treatment seems to reduce the severity of postoperative arrhythmias.
Aims: The aim was to compare the effect of revascularization to conservative treatment in patients with residual silent and with residual symptomatic ischemia following acute myocardial infarction (AMI). The study was a subanalysis of the DANAMI (DANish AMI) randomized study of invasive vs. conservative treatment in patients with inducible ischemia after thrombolysis in AMI. Methods and Results: One thousand and eight patients were randomized to invasive or conservative treatment, stratified by the type of ischemia: silent, i.e. ST depression during an exercise test prior to discharge in 56%, or symptomatic, i.e. chest pain occurring either spontaneously during admission or during the exercise test, with or without ST changes, in 44%. Compared to a conservative strategy, invasive treatment reduced the incidence of nonfatal reinfarction, after in median 2.4 years, in both symptomatic patients (13.3–7.2%, p < 0.006) and patients with silent ischemia (10.1 vs. 5.7%, p < 0.05), and of admissions with unstable angina in symptomatic (44.5–27.6%, p < 0.0001) and silent ischemia (21.6–13.3%, p < 0.0006). Conclusions:Compared to conservative strategy, invasive treatment reduces the risk of nonfatal reinfarction and hospital admissions for unstable angina in thrombolyzed post-AMI patients with silent as well as symptomatic exercise-induced ischemia.
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