To study the mechanisms of myocardial ischemia during isometric exercise, handgrip was sustained, for 4.5 min at 25% of maximum by 11 patients with at least one significant coronary stenosis each, during cardiac catheterization. After recovery, the handgrip that was repeated with simultaneous infusion of nitroglycerin (50 μg over 4 min) directly into the diseased vessel. The cardiovascular response was assessed by hemodynamic and by computer-assisted measurements of stenosis. During the first handgrip test pulmonary capillary wedge pressure rose 56% (15 to 23 mm Hg; p < .001), the heart rate-systolic pressure product rose 33% (p < .01), and the diseased epicardial arteries constricted. Luminal area in the stenotic segment was reduced by 35% (p < .001). During handgrip with intracoronary nitroglycerin, the pressure-rate product again increased 33%, but relative to resting control, capillary wedge pressure fell 4 mm Hg in association with a 32% increase in luminal area of the stenosis and a 28% reduction in flow resistance (all significantly different from the response to handgrip alone: p < .001, .01, and .005, respectively). Thus, coronary vasoconstriction, not increased pressure-rate product, is the dominant mechanism for ischemic left ventricular dysfunction during isometric exercise in patients with significant coronary stenoses.
CITATION STYLE
Brown, B. G., Lee, A. B., Bolson, E. L., & Dodge, H. T. (1984). Reflex constriction of significant coronary stenosis as a mechanism contributing to ischemic left ventricular dysfunction during isometric exercise. Circulation, 70(1), 18–24. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.70.1.18
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