The first case was a 28-year-old man, who developed anginaatrest, followed by inferior myocardial infarction.
2
The patient was a young woman with no risk factors for coronary artery disease who had development of new-onset anginaatrest.
3
Lesion length, anginaatrest, and use of beta blockers correlated independently with slow flow in the univariate as well as in the multivariate analysis.
1
Conclusions: The absence of preinfarctionangina is more frequently observed in patients with no-reflow.
2
Earlier myocardial reperfusion may thus account for the smaller infarct size in patients with preinfarctionangina.
3
The purpose of this study was to determine the clinical significance of preinfarctionangina in the no-reflow phenomenon.
4
Background: When a myocardial infarction is preceded by angina, the infarct tends to be smaller than when there is no preinfarctionangina.
5
Methods: We compared 14 patients who had unstable angina during the week before myocardial infarction with 9 patients who had no preinfarctionangina.
1
Thus, sICAM-1 release is increased, especially in coronary circulation in unstableangina.
2
Women have a better prognosis than men among patients with unstableangina.
3
Significant predictors of postoperative stroke were peripheral vascular disease and unstableangina.
4
A 37-year-old male with unstableangina was admitted to our cardiovascular center.
5
However, outcomes at 6 months among patients with unstableangina differed.