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J Am Coll Cardiol, 1983; 2:258-262
© 1983 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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Myocardial oxygen supply/demand ratio in aortic stenosis: hemodynamic and echocardiographic evaluation of patients with and without angina pectoris

R Nadell, NL DePace, JF Ren, AH Hakki, AS Iskandrian, and J Morganroth

Angina pectoris is a common symptom in patients with aortic stenosis without coronary artery disease. To investigate the correlates of angina pectoris, echocardiographic and hemodynamic data from 44 patients with aortic stenosis and no coronary artery disease (mean age 56 +/- 10 years) were analyzed. Twenty-three patients had no angina pectoris and 21 patients had angina pectoris. The ratio of the diastolic pressure-time index (area between the aortic and left ventricular pressure curves during diastole) to the systolic pressure-time index (area under the left ventricular pressure curve during systole), an index of the oxygen supply/demand ratio, was not different in patients with or without angina pectoris. There were no differences between patients with and without angina pectoris in echocardiographically determined wall thickness, chamber size, systolic and diastolic wall stress and left ventricular mass; in electrocardiographically defined voltage; and in hemodynamically defined aortic valve area, transaortic gradient and stroke work index. Thus, echocardiographic and hemodynamic measurements at rest are not significantly different in the presence or absence of angina pectoris in patients with aortic stenosis. Dynamic data appear to be essential for evaluation of the mechanisms of angina pectoris in patients with aortic stenosis.


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B. K. Julius, M. Spillmann, G. Vassalli, B. Villari, F. R. Eberli, and O. M. Hess
Angina Pectoris in Patients With Aortic Stenosis and Normal Coronary Arteries: Mechanisms and Pathophysiological Concepts
Circulation, February 18, 1997; 95(4): 892 - 898.
[Abstract] [Full Text]



 
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