1. Comparison of Coronary Hemodynamics During Infusions of Dobutamine and Adenosine in Patients With Angina Pectoris
- Author
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Kiyotaka Kugiyama, Etsuo Morita, Masamichi Ohgushi, Hirofumi Yasue, Yoshito Inobe, Hisao Ogawa, and Takeshi Motoyama
- Subjects
Male ,Chest Pain ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adenosine ,Physiology ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Ischemia ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Chest pain ,Great cardiac vein ,Angina Pectoris ,Angina ,Electrocardiography ,Coronary circulation ,Oxygen Consumption ,Heart Rate ,Dobutamine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Lactic Acid ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Aged ,business.industry ,Myocardium ,Heart ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Blood pressure ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cardiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Pharmacologic stress tests are used to evaluate the significance of coronary arterial stenosis, and adenosine and dobutamine are often used for this purpose. The aim of this study was to examine coronary hemodynamics in 16 patients with stable exertional angina who had organic stenosis (> 90%) in the left anterior descending coronary arteries and in 13 control subjects at baseline and during separate intravenous infusions of dobutamine (20 micrograms/kg per min [corrected]) and adenosine (140 micrograms/kg per min [corrected]). Measurements of great cardiac vein blood flow and lactate and oxygen contents in the blood from the aortic root and great cardiac vein were analyzed in patients with ischemic signs of myocardial ischemia (ST-segment depression in the precordial ECG leads and/or myocardial lactate production) during the infusions (in 11 patients during adenosine infusion and in 12 patients during dobutamine infusion) and in control subjects. Myocardial oxygen consumption during adenosine infusion did not change compared with the baseline in both groups, whereas it increased during dobutamine infusion in both groups (p < 0.01 compared with the baseline in each case). However, great cardiac vein blood flow was significantly increased compared with the baseline during both infusions in both groups (p < 0.01 compared with baseline in each case), and the oxygen contents of great cardiac vein blood, which contains effluent from the ischemic region, showed no decrease but increased significantly during both infusions in the patients in comparison with control subjects. Although the global oxygen supply was excessive, myocardial ischemia occurred during dobutamine and adenosine infusions in the patients. As myocardial oxygen consumption remained unchanged during adenosine infusion, regional myocardial flow reduction, possibly as a result of flow maldistribution, may contribute, at least partly, to adenosine-induced myocardial ischemia. An increase in myocardial oxygen consumption may be the principal cause of myocardial ischemia during dobutamine infusion, but an inappropriate flow increase in normal myocardium may occur during dobutamine-induced ischemia.
- Published
- 1998
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