Abstract
This study describes the results of ergonovine testing in 100 consecutive patients who underwent this procedure in a coronary care unit. All patients had recently undergone coronary arteriography. A bolus injection of ergonovine was administered at 5 minute intervals in the following doses (mg): 0.0125, 0.025, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3 and 0.4. The criterion for a positive test was the appearance of S-T elevation greater than 1 mm. The test was positive in all 17 patients known to have variant angina and in 18 (40 percent) of 45 patients who had a history of chest pain judged strongly suggestive of variant angina but who had no electrocardiogram recorded during pain. Of 38 patients with a history of chest pain classified as not entirely typical of variant angina, only 1 (2.6 percent) had a positive test. Of the 64 patients with a negative ergonovine test, 47 had chest pain and 25 had nausea but none had more serious complications. Ventricular arrhythmia accompanied S-T elevation in 18 of the 36 patients with a positive test but occurred in only 4 of the 64 with a negative test (p < 0.0005). No patient needed treatment with antiarrhythmic drugs. Four of the 36 patients with a positive test had serious complications: severe translent hypotension (2 patients), recurrent episodes of angina with S-T elevation (1 patient) and a subendocardial infarction (1 patient). Thus, ergonovine testing is useful in patients with a typical clinical history of variant angina but without an electrocardiogram recorded during pain. in this study, a small but definite incidence of serious complications occurred during a positive test.
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