Although silent myocardial ischemia (SI) occurs frequently in patients with angina and is of prognostic significance, little is known of its occurrence in other subgroups. We assessed the incidence ...of SI in offspring of Framingham Heart Study (FHS) patients following unrecognized myocardial infarction (UMI) and in controls without MI but who were matched for age, sex, hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and total cholesterol at entry into the FHS. Of the 20 UMI patients, six had died and one with left bundle branch block was excluded. The remaining 13 UMI patients and 26 control patients underwent 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring (AECG) for SI. Two patients (one from each group) with angina were excluded from the AECG analysis. Only two (15.4%) of the UMI patients and two (7.7%) of the control patients had any AECG evidence of SI. These preliminary results suggest that routine monitoring for SI is not indicated in asymptomatic long-term survivors of UMI or in asymptomatic patients without prior MI but with otherwise similar risk profiles.
Ischemic preconditioning is among the most consistent and powerful modes of reducing myocardial infarct size. Although several clinical studies have suggested that the human heart can be ...preconditioned, controversy exists in both the experimental and clinical literature as to whether the senescent heart can be preconditioned. The authors recently reported that older patients (> or = 60 years of age) in the Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction-4 study appeared to benefit from a history of angina prior to acute myocardial infarction. This observation may lead to a clinical counterpart to successful preconditioning in the older heart.
Ischemic preconditioning is one of the most powerful means to reduce myocardial ischemic cell death in the experimental laboratory. Data are now emerging suggesting that ischemic preconditioning also ...can occur in the human heart. Studies performed on human myocardial biopsies, angioplasty studies, clinical studies assessing acute tolerance to angina, and some studies evaluating the effect of angina prior to myocardial infarction, lend support to the concept that the human heart can be preconditioned. The ultimate objective is to develop preconditioning-mimetic agents that can be administered prophylactically prior to the time of cardiopulmonary bypass surgery or administered to hearts that have been harvested for transplant in order to better preserve the ischemically jeopardized myocyte.
Continuous ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring of ST-segment configuration has become a useful technique for evaluation of myocardial ischemia. Concern that direct or amplitude-modulated (AM) ...recording and playback systems have inherent limitations that cause inaccurate ST-segment recordings has led to preference for frequency-modulated (FM) devices. To determine the accuracy of AM and FM ambulatory electrocardiographic systems, the signal was compared from the same set of 2 bipolar leads simultaneously recorded by standard electrocardiography and AM and FM recorders in 14 patients during treadmill exercise. Also, simultaneous AM and FM recorders were compared in 9 ambulatory patients in 16 monitoring sessions. The AM recording system accurately reproduced ST segments recorded during treadmill exercise (range 4.0 mm of ST-segment depression to 2.0 mm of ST elevation) when measured at the J point (r = 0.91, p less than 0.0001), and 0.08 second after the J point (r = 0.95, p less than 0.0001). FM recording was equally accurate (r = 0.89 and 0.95, respectively, p less than 0.0001). Similarly, during ambulatory recording, the AM technique accurately recorded maximal ST depression in each episode as recorded by the FM device (28 episodes, range 0 to 3 mm of ST depression, r = 0.85, p less than 0.0001). Both AM and FM ambulatory electrocardiographic systems can accurately reproduce ST-segment deviation associated with ischemia and can be used to monitor transient ST-segment changes in patients with coronary artery disease.
The presence of a varicocele in adult men has been correlated with infertility. This study documents the effect of an experimentally induced unilateral varicocele in 21-day-old juvenile prepubertal ...and 51-day-old adult rats (n = 10 per group) on subsequent adult testicular function. Varicoceles were induced by partial occlusion of the spermatic vein. There were ten sham-operated and five nonoperated control rats in each age group. The rats were sacrificed 1 month after surgery. Intrascrotal temperatures were elevated in both groups with varicoceles. Histologically, the ipsilateral testes of rats in both age groups demonstrated a decrease in the numbers of functioning seminiferous tubules and germ cells, but the decrease was significantly greater in the juveniles than in the adult rats. No changes were seen in the contralateral testes. Significant titers of cytotoxic sperm antibodies were present in all animals with varicoceles, which is in contrast to controls. The juveniles had significantly lower antibody titers (mean log2 +/- SEM; 3.2 +/- 0.09 vs. 8.5 +/- 1.1, P less than 0.001) than the adults. The induction of a unilateral varicocele damaged spermatogenesis and testicular function to a greater extent in juveniles than in adult rats. This damage may be immune complex-mediated.