Painless ST-segment Depression in Patients with Angina Pectoris. Correlation with Daily Activities and Cigarette Smoking
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Ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring was employed in 33 patients with angina pectoris and abnormal stress tests to determine the frequency with which myocardial ischemia manifested by painless ST-segment depression occurred during normal activity. ST-segment depression occurred in 24 patients during the monitoring period; and in 21, it occurred either solely in the absence of pain or both with and without pain. Of 109 recorded episodes of ST-segment depression, 61 percent were painless. The frequency of painless ST-segment depression was independent of activity other than automobile driving, during which all episodes were painless. In patients who smoked cigarettes, ST-segment depression was more common while smoking, but the incidence of painless ST-segment depression was not altered. The study indicates that ST-segment depression occurs more commonly in the absence than in the presence of chest pain and that ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring is a useful method of determining the frequency of myocardial ischemia during normal daily activity.
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