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      Chest pain in patients with ‘normal angiography’: could it be cardiac? :

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      International Journal of Evidence-Based Healthcare
      Wiley

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          Angina pectoris and slow flow velocity of dye in coronary arteries--a new angiographic finding.

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            Primary coronary microvascular dysfunction: clinical presentation, pathophysiology, and management.

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              Racial heterogeneity in coronary artery vasomotor reactivity: differences between Japanese and Caucasian patients.

              Japanese investigators have provided a substantial contribution in the understanding of coronary vasomotor reactivity. On occasions, their findings have been at variance with those undertaken on caucasian patients, raising speculation that vasomotor differences between races may exist. In a comparative review of the published literature, we evaluated the vasoreactive differences among Japanese and caucasian patients with variant angina or myocardial infarction. In variant angina, Japanese patients appear to have diffusely hyperreactive coronary arteries compared with caucasian people, manifested by their segmental rather than focal spasm, hyperreactive nonspastic vessels and multivessel spasm. These differences may reflect the increased basal tone among Japanese variant angina patients and may relate to controversial differences in endothelial nitric oxide production or autonomic nervous system activity. Provocative vasomotor studies of Japanese patients with a recent myocardial infarction report a higher incidence of inducible spasm than caucasian studies, an observation recently supported by a controlled study. Furthermore, the hyperreactivity was diffuse, occurring in both non-infarct- and infarct-related vessels. These observations support the existence of racial coronary vasomotor reactivity differences but require confirmation in further prospectively conducted studies.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Evidence-Based Healthcare
                International Journal of Evidence-Based Healthcare
                Wiley
                1744-1595
                2013
                March 2013
                : 11
                : 1
                : 56-68
                Article
                10.1111/1744-1609.12002
                23448331
                7e65789a-045b-49f5-927e-b0401f4e7695
                © 2013
                History

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