Results 271 to 280 of about 227,800 (324)

3D‐speckle tracking echocardiography for assessment of coronary artery disease severity in stable angina pectoris

Echocardiography, 2018
Stable angina pectoris is a common disease that may cause disability. Some noninvasive new methods can be useful for the detection of early‐stage coronary artery disease.
Mustafa Doğduş   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

BMIPP in angina pectoris [PDF]

open access: possibleThe International Journal of Cardiac Imaging, 1999
Radionuclide imaging with BMIPP for assessment of myocardial metabolism can assist in clinical decision making in certain subsets of patients with coronary artery disease. In stable angina, abnormal BMIPP imaging and less BMIPP uptake than Tl-201 are more likely to be seen in the distribution of vessels with severe stenoses and related to regional wall
Shigeyuki Nishimura, Yoshiko Ohta
openaire   +2 more sources

Stable Angina Pectoris

Current Atherosclerosis Reports, 2014
The stable coronary artery disease (SCAD) population is a heterogeneous group of patients both for clinical presentations and for different underlying mechanisms. The recent European Society of Cardiology guidelines extensively review SCAD from its definition to patients' diagnostic and therapeutic management.
Valgimigli M., Biscaglia S.
openaire   +5 more sources

Unstable Angina Pectoris

Survey of Anesthesiology, 2000
Unstable angina accounts for more than 1 million hospital admissions annually1; 6 to 8 percent of patients with this condition have nonfatal myocardial infarction or die within the first year after diagnosis.2,3 Various definitions of unstable angina have been proposed, but in 1989, Braunwald devised a classification system to ensure uniformity of ...
Joel B. Braunstein   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Unstable angina pectoris

American Heart Journal, 1976
Unstable angina is a syndrome which comprises a spectrum of symptomatic manifestations of coronary artery disease which lies between stable angina pectoris and acute myocardial infarction. Patients fall into three groups: angina of recent onset (4 weeks), angina of changing pattern, and angina occurring at rest (longer than 15 minutes).
Ivan George Fantus   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Remission of angina pectoris

The American Journal of Cardiology, 1978
A report from the Framingham Study in a recent issue of the Journal1 suggests that angina pectoris need not always progress inexorably to coronary death but may, at times, completely disappear. Kannel and Sorliel found that one third of a group of patients reporting substernal distress on a routine examination were asymptomatic when reevaluated 2 years
Hiltrud Mueller, Stephen M. Ayres
openaire   +2 more sources

Angina Pectoris

The Hospital, 1909
left arm to the fingers. This pain he describes as being generally characterised by a sense of constriction, as though the heart were being compressed in a powerful grasp, but occasionally it is stabbing.
Angina Pectoris
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy