Circulation, Vol 86, 22-28, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
AA Quyyumi, JA Panza, JG Diodati, E Lakatos and SE Epstein
BACKGROUND. There is a circadian pattern in the occurrence of cardiac
events in patients with coronary artery disease. Whether changes in
coronary vascular tone contribute to these phenomena is unknown. We
measured the ischemic threshold, defined as either the heart rate or
rate-pressure product at 1-mm ST segment depression during treadmill
exercise and used it as an index of the lowest coronary vascular
resistance; the premise was that when ischemic threshold became lower,
coronary vascular resistance was higher, and vice versa. METHODS AND
RESULTS. Fifteen patients (group A) with stable coronary artery disease
underwent four identical treadmill exercise tests in 24 hours, and ischemic
threshold was measured as the heart rate at the onset of 1-mm ST
depression. Before each treadmill test, postischemic forearm vascular
resistance was measured after 5 minutes of forearm occlusion, using
strain-gauge plethysmography. Sixteen additional patients (group B)
underwent two treadmill tests at 8 AM and 1 PM, and ischemic threshold was
measured as the heart rate-blood pressure product at 1-mm ST depression. A
circadian variation was noted: In group A, the heart rate-derived ischemic
threshold was lower at 8 AM and 9 PM compared with noon and 5 PM (p less
than 0.03). Also, in group B, the rate- pressure product-derived ischemic
threshold was 8 +/- 2% lower at 8 AM compared with 1 PM (p = 0.008). A
circadian variation parallel to the observed variation in ischemic
threshold was also noted in the postischemic forearm blood flow, which was
lower in the morning and at night (p less than 0.004). There was a strong
correlation between postischemic forearm blood flow and ischemic threshold
(p less than 0.0001), such that ischemic threshold was lower at the time of
day when postischemic forearm blood flow was lower, and vice versa.
CONCLUSIONS. A lower ischemic threshold in the morning suggests that the
ischemia- induced coronary vascular resistance is increased at this time, a
finding supported by a similar variation in postischemic forearm vascular
resistance. Parallel changes in forearm and coronary resistance suggest
that generalized (neural or humoral factors) rather than local factors are
responsible for the observed circadian changes. Increased coronary tone in
the mornings may not only contribute to the higher incidence of transient
ischemia but may help trigger acute cardiac events at this time.
ARTICLES
Circadian variation in ischemic threshold. A mechanism underlying the circadian variation in ischemic events
Cardiology Branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md 20892.
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