Abstract
The aim of this study was to elucidate further the causative mechanism of abnormal coronary vasomotion in patients with syndrome X. In patients with syndrome X, defined as angina pectoris and documented myocardial ischaemia during stress testing with normal findings at coronary angiography, abnormal coronary vasomotion of either the micro- or the macrocirculation has been suggested as the causative mechanism. Accordingly, we evaluated endothelial function, vasodilator reserve, and perfusion heterogeneity in these patients. Twenty-five patients with syndrome X (definitely normal coronary arteriogram, group A), 15 patients with minimal coronary artery disease (group B) and 21 healthy volunteers underwent [N-13]ammonia positron emission tomography at rest, during cold presser stimulation (endothelial function) and during dipyridamole stress testing (vasodilator reserve). Heterogeneity of myocardial perfusion was analysed by parametric polar mapping using a 480-segment model. In both patient groups, resting perfusion was increased compared to the normal subjects: group A, 127+/-31 ml.min(-1).100 g(-1); group B, 124+/-30 ml.min(-1).100 g(-1) normal subjects, 105+/-21 ml.min(-1).100 g(-1) (groups A and B vs normals, P
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 530-537 |
| Number of pages | 8 |
| Journal | European Journal of Nuclear Medicine |
| Volume | 24 |
| Issue number | 5 |
| Publication status | Published - May-1997 |
Keywords
- positron emission tomography
- syndrome
- endothelial function
- perfusion reserve
- perfusion heterogeneity
- BLOOD-FLOW
- ANGINA-PECTORIS
- ENDOTHELIAL DYSFUNCTION
- N-13 AMMONIA
- INTRAVASCULAR ULTRASOUND
- ARTERY DISEASE
- CHEST PAIN
- MICROVASCULAR ANGINA
- RESERVE
- ATHEROSCLEROSIS