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Call for papers! Thematic Collection on Cardiac Amyloidosis

International Journal of Cardiovascular Sciences

The disease can cause a variety of symptoms, including heart failure, arrhythmias, peripheral embolism, dysautonomia, angina with normal coronary arteries, and others. The aim of this thematic collection is to gather high-quality articles that contribute to the advancement of knowledge about cardiac amyloidosis.

Article 52
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Sildenafils effectiveness in the primary coronary slow flow phenomenon: a pilot randomised controlled clinical trial

Open Heart

Background On the one hand, the primary coronary slow flow phenomenon (CSFP) can cause recurrence of chest pain, prompting medical examinations and further healthcare costs, while on the other hand, it can lead to myocardial infarction, ventricular arrhythmia and sudden cardiac death.

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Management and outcomes of spontaneous coronary artery dissection: a systematic review of the literature

Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine

with ST elevated myocardial infarction (STEMI), 3.41% with unstable angina, 0.56% with stable angina, and 0.11% were diagnosed with various types of arrhythmias. Approximately 48.5% of the patients were diagnosed with non-ST elevated myocardial infarction (NSTEMI), 36.8% There were initially 65.2%

SCAD 75
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The Hidden Toll of Chronic Stress on Your Heart Health

MIBHS

Arrhythmias (Abnormal Heart Rhythms) Stress hormones can disrupt the signals that regulate your heartbeat, leading to arrhythmias – abnormal heart rhythms that cause your heart to beat too fast, too slow, or irregularly.

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46 year old with chest pain develops a wide complex rhythm -- see many examples

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

There are three mechanisms of arrhythmia: automatic, re-entry, and triggered. The most common triggered arrhythmia is Torsades de Pointes. It is a benign arrhythmia which requires no specific treatment. Possible mechanisms of ventricular arrhythmias elicited by ischemia followed by reperfusion. What is the rhythm?

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Three normal high sensitivity troponins over 4 hours with a "normal ECG"

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Thus, the patient does not (yet) get a formal diagnosis of MI and must be called unstable angina unless further troponins return above the 99th percentile. On the basis of unresolved angina, cardiology decided to perform rescue PCI. Medically refractory angina should have immediate angiography, but this only happens 6.4%

Angina 101
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Is this a STEMI? No, not by definition! Why not? Why is this Important?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Therefore this is " Transient ST Elevation Unstable Angina." As there was ruptured plaque, this is NOT Prinzmetal's angina. Here are many other cases of Unstable Angina , in spite of Eugene Braunwald's Requiem for Unstable Angina. So Unstable Angina still exists [even with high sensitivity (hs) troponins].

STEMI 52