Abstract
Location, severity, duration, and time course of pain were assessed in 104 consecutive patients with either first or second, anterior or inferior Q-wave acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Pain severity was assessed using a visual analog scale. Pain location and radiation were similar in 48 patients with anterior and 56 patients with inferior wall AMI. Pain duration (6.1 ± 6.4 vs 6.5 ± 5.4 hours, p = NS) and severity (68 ± 21 vs 61 ± 21 mm, p = NS) were also similar. The pain was continuous in 34 patients with anterior (71%) and in 42 with inferior (75%) wall AMI. Among the 41 patients who did not receive thrombolytic therapy, 18 patients with continuous pain had a higher creatine kinase peak level than the remaining 23 patients with intermittent pain or preinfarction angina, or both (2,065 ± 1,017 vs 1,162 ± 994 IU, p <0.01). The incidence of gastrointestinal symptoms was slightly higher in patients with inferior than anterior wall AMI (70% vs 48%, p <0.05). Among 32 patients admitted with a second AMI, pain location was similar in 14 who had both infarcts in the same myocardial region, but was different in 12 of 18 (67%) who had a first and second infarct in different regions ( p <0.001). Thus, patients with anterior or inferior wall AMI experienced pain in similar body regions. However, in patients who presented with >1 AMI, different locations of the infarction pain were highly predictive of ischemia occurring in different myocardial regions. Finally, patients with preinfarction angina or intermittent pain tended to have smaller infarcts.
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