Abstract
Twenty-three patients (ages 44-82) with angina-like chest pain with a negative stress test and a normal coronary angiogram were studied for myocardial lactate metabolism during atrial pacing and for esophageal motor function with manometric measurements and acid infusion test. Eight patients had an abnormal myocardial lactate metabolism during maximal atrial pacing. Esophageal motor anomalies were observed in six of these eight patients and nine of the 15 subjects with normal myocardial lactate metabolism. The frequency and type of these anomalies were not different between the two groups of patients. Perfusion of acid into the esophagus reproduced the spontaneous pain syndrome in three patients, independent of any simultaneous motor dysfunction. These results suggest that esophageal motor anomalies must be interpreted with caution in patients with angina-like chest pain before affirming the exclusively esophageal origin of the pain.
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