Variability in coronary hemodynamics in response to ergonovine in patients with normal coronary arteries and atypical chest pain
AB Schwartz,
TA Donmichael,
EH Botvinick,
T Ishimori,
WW Parmley,
and
K Chatterjee
Because an increase in coronary vascular resistance in response to ergonovine maleate has been suggested as a possible diagnostic aid for variant angina, changes were evaluated in coronary hemodynamics and serial myocardial thallium-201 perfusion scans in 15 patients without angina and with normal coronary arteries in response to ergonovine (0.05, 0.10 and 0.20 mg intravenously). For the group, heart rate-blood pressure product increased significantly (p less than 0.001) without any change in coronary sinus flow, coronary vascular resistance, myocardial oxygen extraction, arterial-coronary sinus oxygen difference and lactate extraction. In 7 of 15 patients, however, coronary vascular resistance increased (mean 39%, range 11 to 75%, probability [p] less than 0.001), and coronary sinus flow decreased (14%, p less than 0.001), despite an increase in heart rate-blood pressure product (36%, p less than 0.02). No electrocardiographic, metabolic or thallium-201 scan abnormalities occurred. Therefore, significant increases in coronary vascular resistance in response to ergonovine may occur in patients with normal coronary arteries and atypical chest pain.