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Myocardial infarction after vascular surgery: the role of prolonged stress-induced, ST depression-type ischemia.

Authors :
Landesberg G
Mosseri M
Zahger D
Wolf Y
Perouansky M
Anner H
Drenger B
Hasin Y
Berlatzky Y
Weissman C
Source :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology [J Am Coll Cardiol] 2001 Jun 01; Vol. 37 (7), pp. 1839-45.
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

Objectives: The goal of this study was to investigate the nature of the association between silent ischemia and postoperative myocardial infarction (PMI).<br />Background: Silent ischemia predicts cardiac morbidity and mortality in both ambulatory and postoperative patients. Whether silent stress-induced ischemia is merely a marker of extensive coronary artery disease or has a closer association with infarction has not been determined.<br />Methods: In 185 consecutive patients undergoing vascular surgery, we correlated ischemia duration, as detected on a continuous 12-lead ST-trend monitoring during the period 48 h to 72 h after surgery, with cardiac troponin-I (cTn-I) measured in the first three postoperative days and with postoperative cardiac outcome. Postoperative myocardial infarction was defined as cTn-I >3.1 ng/ml accompanied by either typical symptoms or new ischemic electrocardiogram (ECG) findings.<br />Results: During 11,132 patient-hours of monitoring, 38 patients (20.5%) had 66 transient ischemic events, all but one denoted by ST-segment depression. Twelve patients (6.5%) sustained PMI; one of those patients died. All infarctions were non-Q-wave and were detected by a rise in cTn-I during or immediately after prolonged, ST depression-type ischemia. The average duration ofischemia in patients with PMI was 226+/-164 min (range: 29 to 625), compared with 38+/-26 min (p = 0.0000) in 26 patients with ischemia but not infarction. Peak cTn-I strongly correlated with the longest, as well as cumulative, ischemia duration (r = 0.83 and r = 0.78, respectively). Ischemic ECG changes were completely reversible in all but one patient who had persistent new T wave inversion. All ischemic events culminating in PMI were preceded by an increase in heart rate (delta heart rate = 32+/-15 beats/min), and most (67%) of them began at the end of surgery and emergence from anesthesia.<br />Conclusions: Prolonged, ST depression-type ischemia progresses to MI and is strongly associated with the majority of cardiac complications after vascular surgery.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0735-1097
Volume :
37
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11401120
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0735-1097(01)01265-7