Abstract

Ventricular arrhythmias during transient myocardial ischemia were studied in 60 patients with spontaneous angina and ≥1 ischemic attack with ST-segment depression during 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiography. The patients were divided into 2 groups: group 1, 10 patients (17%) who developed ventricular arrhythmias during 26 of 92 (28%) ischemic attacks; and group 2, 50 patients who did not show this phenomenon. Daily ischemic attacks, total ischemic time and the proportion of symptomatic ischemic attacks were significantly greater (p < 0.01) in group 1 versus group 2. In group 1 patients, ischemic attacks were found to have twice the duration in the presence of arrhythmias than in their absence (20.4 ± 11.9 vs 9.1 ±8.4 minutes, p < 0.01); arrhythmias were more common during symptomatic than during silent ischemic attacks (39 vs 13%, p < 0.02). Arrhythmias occurred at the onset or peak of ST-segment depression (ischemia phase) in 6 cases (60%), during the resolution of ST-segment depression (recovery phase) in 2 cases (20%) and during both phases of ischemic attacks in the remaining 2 (20%). When compared to recovery phase arrhythmias, ischemia phase arrhythmias were characterized by a later onset time (173 ± 144 vs 58 ± 54 seconds, p < 0.01) and a longer duration (105 ±107 vs 41 ± 22 seconds, p < 0.01). During the ischemia phase, 16 of 353 ventricular premature complexes initiated ventricular tachycardia, while during the recovery phase only 1 of 161 ventricular premature complexes resulted in ventricular tachycardia (4.5 vs 0.6%, p < 0.02). Thus, ventricular arrhythmias may accompany spontaneous ischemic ST-segment depression, when the latter is recurrent, prolonged and symptomatic; arrhythmias are characterized by a greater frequency, duration and malignancy during the ischemia phase than during the recovery phase of ischemic attacks.

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