article thumbnail

Recurrent polymorphic ventricular tachycardia without chest pain: an unusual presentation of focal coronary artery spasm

The British Journal of Cardiology

Coronary artery spasm (CAS), or Prinzmetal angina, is a recognised cause of myocardial ischaemia in non-obstructed coronary arteries which typically presents with anginal chest pain. This case report describes an atypical presentation of CAS in a 68-year-old white British male with cardiovascular risk factors.

article thumbnail

Ischemia with no obstructed coronary arteries and microvascular testing procedures: a review of utility, pharmacotherapy, and current challenges

Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine

Ischemia with no obstructive coronary arteries (INOCA) is an increasingly recognized condition in patients presenting with angina and positive stress tests but without significant coronary artery stenosis. The paper discusses a potential interference between vasodilators used in trans-radial access and coronary spasm testing.

article thumbnail

A man in his 40s with 3 days of stuttering chest pain

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Distilling this case into its most salient components, a man with multiple risk factors for coronary disease is presenting with several days of chest pain and markedly elevated troponin with no other reason to explain the lab abnormality ( e.g. sepsis). This is WHY refractory angina should prompt immediate angiography.

article thumbnail

How High Blood Pressure Affects Your Heart and What You Can Do About It

MIBHS

This condition reduces blood flow to the heart, increasing the risk of angina (chest pain) and heart attacks. Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) : High blood pressure accelerates the development of CAD by promoting the buildup of plaques in the coronary arteries.

article thumbnail

Concerning EKG with a Non-obstructive angiogram. What happened?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

The commonest causes of MINOCA include: atherosclerotic causes such as plaque rupture or erosion with spontaneous thrombolysis, and non-atherosclerotic causes such as coronary vasospasm (sometimes called variant angina or Prinzmetal's angina), coronary embolism or thrombosis, possibly microvascular dysfunction.

Plaque 127
article thumbnail

Critical Left Main

EMS 12-Lead

Given the consistency of the clinical profile with typical angina, associated risk factors, and abnormal ECG findings, a cardiology consult was promptly requested. 3-vessel disease with a culprit lesion [Typical angina, multiple risk factors] b. If they all return normal, then this is unstable angina.

Angina 52
article thumbnail

Abstract TP136: STRACK: A Continuum of Stroke Care, Improving Post-Stroke and Cardiometabolic Patient Outcomes

Stroke Journal

Background:The STRACK project aims to improve post-stroke patient management and the transition from acute to primary care thanks to improvements in patient pathways and monitoring cardiovascular risk factors: heart failure, diabetes, atrial fibrillation, dyslipidemia and hypertension.

Stroke 40