Abstract

In an attempt to clarify the role of coronary artery spasm in the pathogenesis of unstable angina, acetylcholine (20 and 50 μg) was injected directly into the coronary arteries of 19 patients with unstable effort angina (group 1), 30 patients with unstable spontaneous angina (group 2), and 15 patients with stable effort angina due to coronary artery organic stenosis (≧ 75%) (group 3). Coronary spasm was defined as severe vasoconstriction (≧ 90% of luminal diameter) with chest pain and/or ischemic ST-segment changes. Intracoronary injection of acetylcholine induced spasm of at least one coronary artery in 19 patients (100%) of group 1 and 28 (93%) of group 2 but only 3 (20%) of group 3 ( p < 0.01). When acetylcholine was injected into the left and right coronary arteries separately, multivessel spasm (spasm of both coronary arteries) was induced in 5 of 12 (42%) patients of group 1 and in 9 of 23 (39%) patients of group 2. In contrast, intracoronary acetylcholine did not cause multivessel coronary spasm in any of 15 patients of group 3 (0%). These results suggest that coronary arteries in patients with unstable effort angina as well as spontaneous angina are susceptible to spasm and that coronary artery spasm may be responsible at least in part for the genesis of attacks in these patients.

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