Clinical Studies
Exercise-induced myocardial ischemia in isolated coronary artery ectasias and aneurysms (“dilated coronaropathy”)

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Abstract

OBJECTIVES

The purpose of our study was to evaluate the clinical significance of isolated coronary artery ectasias or aneurysms (CEA).

BACKGROUND

It has been postulated that altered coronary blood flow in CEA predisposes patients to the development of myocardial ischemia (CI) and infarction.

METHODS

Sixty-seven patients with bilateral nonobstructive CEA without associated cardiac defects (“dilated coronaropathy”) were derived from 16,341 cardiac catheterizations between 1986 and 1997. Ectasias were defined as luminal dilation of 1.5- to 2.0-fold, aneurysms of >2.0-fold of normal limits. Eleven of 25 patients presented with myocardial infarction due to an occlusion of the infarct vessel. In 42 patients without infarction (study group), exercise-induced CI was investigated.

RESULTS

A corresponding CI was documented in 32 of 42 patients in a coronary sinus lactate study (reduced lactate extraction 5.6 ± 4.1%) and in 29 of 40 patients in an ergometry (0.25 ± 0.06 mV ST depressions). The results differed significantly from a control group of 29 patients without heart disease (p < 0.001). Nitroglycerin (0.8 mg) provoked a further significant deterioration of CI in the 32 of 42 developing a frank cardiac lactate production (−2.6 ± 6.8%, p < 0.001). The metabolic extent of CI was significantly correlated to the coronary diameters of the proximal and middle segments of left anterior descending artery and the middle segment of left circumflex artery (r = 0.87, p < 0.001). Stigmata of an impaired coronary blood flow such as delayed antegrade filling, segmental backflow phenomenon and local deposition of dye were found significantly more often with increasing coronary diameters (p < 0.04).

CONCLUSIONS

“Dilated coronaropathy” is an entity of nonobstructive, ischemic coronary artery disease. Nitroglycerin is of no therapeutic benefit but leads to an aggravation of exercise-induced CI.

Abbreviations

beats/min
beats per minute
CEA
coronary artery ectasias or aneurysms
CI
myocardial ischemia
CLM
cardiac lactate metabolism
CS
coronary sinus
ECG
electrocardiogram
LAD
left anterior descending coronary artery
LADd
distal segment of LAD
LADm
median segment of LAD
LADp
proximal segment of LAD
LCX
left circumflex artery
LMT
left main trunk
MET
mean metabolic equivalent
NTG
nitroglycerin
RCA
right coronary artery

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