Circulation, Vol 74, 973-979, Copyright © 1986 by American Heart Association
RG Macdonald, JA Hill and RL Feldman
To assess the relationship between the direction of ST segment response to
transient coronary occlusion and collateral function, we studied 25
patients with diagnostic ST segment changes during transient occlusion of
the proximal left anterior descending artery (LAD). Electrocardiographic
leads I, II, V2, and V5; left ventricular filling, aortic, and distal
coronary pressures; and great cardiac vein flow were measured during
percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) of the LAD. During a
1 min LAD balloon occlusion, 16 patients had reversible ST elevation (group
I) and nine patients had ST depression (group II). The ST responses in
individual patients were consistent during repeated occlusions, and ST
depression never preceded ST elevation. Angiography before PTCA showed less
severe LAD stenosis in group I (69 +/- 15%) than in group II (88 +/- 10%; p
less than .01) and collateral filling of the LAD in no group I patient but
in six of nine patients in group II (p less than .01). During LAD
occlusion, determinants of myocardial oxygen demand (left ventricular
filling pressure, aortic pressure, heart rate, and double product) were
similar in both groups. Group I patients, however, had lower distal
coronary pressure (25 +/- 8 vs 41 +/- 16 mm Hg) and residual great cardiac
vein flow (33 +/- 14 vs 51 +/- 22 ml/min) and higher coronary collateral
resistance (3.1 +/- 2.1 vs 1.5 +/- 0.8 mm Hg/ml/min) than group II patients
(all p less than .05). In patients with ST elevation during LAD occlusion,
stenosis before PTCA was less severe, visible collaterals were not present,
and hemodynamic variables during LAD occlusion reflected poorer collateral
function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
ST segment response to acute coronary occlusion: coronary hemodynamic and angiographic determinants of direction of ST segment shift
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