Ischemic heart disease: Difference between revisions
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|surname1 = Pastor
|surname1 = Pastor
|name1 = Jan
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|title = Langenbeck's medical web page
|source_name = Langenbeck's medical web page
|year = 2004
|year = 2004
|cited = 2010-04-22
|cited = 2010-04-22
|url = https://www.freewebs.com/langenbeck/Specialka1.rar}}
|url = https://www.freewebs.com/langenbeck/Specialka1.rar}}
===References===
===References===



Revision as of 17:31, 19 March 2023

Atherosclerotic narrowing of the coronary artery

Ischemic heart disease is a group of disease states that have in common ischemia (i.e. a mismatch between oxygen demand and supply). We distinguish several forms of CHD:

Acute forms of CHD Chronic forms of CHD
Acute myocardial infarction (STEMI, NSTEMI) Status after completing AIM
Unstable angina pectoris Stable angina pectoris
Sudden coronary death Prinzmetal's angina pectoris
Coronary Syndrome X
Silent myocardial ischemia
ICHD manifesting in heart failure
ICHS manifested by arrhythmias

Causes of Ischemia

  1. Increased need for oxygen by the myocardium - tachycardia during increased physical exertion,
  2. Decreased blood oxygen content - cyanotic VSV (with right-to-left shunt), severe anemia, CO poisoning, hypotension (shock), severe lung disease,
  3. Reduced blood flow through the coronary arteries.


In more than 90% of CVD cases, reduced blood flow through the coronary arteries is applied, most often on the basis of coronary atherosclerosis. More rarely due to sembolism to the main branches of the coronary arteries (vegetation in infectious or non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis), dissection of the aorta (its spread to the coronary arteries), luetic aortitis', coronary arteritis' (polyarteriitis nodosa, Kawasaki disease) and congenital malformations of coronary arteries.

6:11CC

Coronary atherosclerosis

Atherosclerotic artery

Atherosclerotic plaques can narrow the lumen of the coronary artery concentrically or eccentrically, the severity of the sclerosis is determined by the percentage of narrowing of the lumen of the artery (intra vitam - coronarography, post mortem - cross-sections):

'I. degree - up to 25%;
'II. degree - up to 50%;
'III. degree - up to 75%;
IV. grade - above 75%.

Clinically significant is degree IV, in the case of hypertrophy of the left heart (e.g. in aortic stenosis or systemic hypertension) so-called relative coronary insufficiency occurs ' even with a lesser degree of stenosis, as the hypertrophic myocardium has higher metabolic demands. Occlusions occur more in the left coronary artery (here most often in the first 2 cm of the RIA and RC course) than in the right (here most often in the first and third third of its course).

The plates are of two types:

  1. fibrous - hyalinized collagen tissue, few lipids, are the basis of chronic forms of CHD (stable angina pectoris, chronic CHD).
  2. atheroma - contains mushy masses containing lipids, the surface is covered with a cap of hyalinized tissue, is a predisposition to the development of acute forms of CHD (unstable angina pectoris, acute myocardial infarction, sudden coronary death), which the cause is an acute change in the plaque - rupture with encroaching thrombosis, bleeding into the plaque, spasm at the site of the plaque (caused by inadequate irritation of the vagus nerve) - does not occur in a healthy artery.

Risk Factors

Affectible: arterial hypertension, dyslipidemia, smoking, diabetes, hyperhomocysteinemia, obesity, lack of exercise.

Uninfluenceable: age, gender, family burden.

Links

Original text is from WikiSkripta https://www.wikiskripta.eu/w/Ischemick%C3%A1_choroba_srde%C4%8Dn%C3%AD

Related Articles

Source


References

  • KLENER, P. Internal medicine. 3. edition. Prague : Galen, 2006. ISBN 80-7262-430-X.





ECG changes and mechanisms of their formation during ischemia and myocardial infarction