Abstract

To elucidate the possible contribution of coronary artery spasm to the pathogenesis of angina pectoris, coronary arterial reponses to intracoronary injection of acetylcholine were examined in patients with various types of angina pectoris. Coronary artery spasm with chest pain and/or electrocardiographic ischemic changes was angiographically demonstrated in 50 (85%) of 59 patients with angina pectoris. The sensitivity for coronary spasm was 92% (24 of 26) in patients with rest angina, 100% (16 of 16) in patients with both rest and effort angina, and 59% (10 of 17) in patients with effort angina, while it was only 6% (1 of 16) in patients without coronary artery disease. When patients with effort angina were subdivided according to the variability of anginal threshold for exertional angina, the sensitivity for coronary spasm was as high as 90% (9 out of 10) in patients with variable-threshold angina. In contrast, coronary spasm was less frequently ( p < 0.05) induced in patients with fixed-threshold angina (1 of 7, 14%). These results suggest that coronary arteries in patients with angina pectoris are quite susceptible to acetylcholine except in those patients with stable exercise tolerance or anginal threshold. Thus coronary artery spasm appears to play a significant role for the pathogenesis of angina pectoris in a large proportion of patients with effort angina as well as in patients with rest angina.

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