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Edrophonium: A Useful Provocative Test for Esophageal Chest Pain
124
Citations
23
References
1985
Year
Esophageal Motility DisordersEsophageal Chest PainEsophagusCardiogenic ShockCardiovascular DiseasePain MedicineMyocardial InfarctionGastroenterologyPharmacotherapyChest InjuryChest PainPublic HealthMedicineUseful Provocative TestCardiologyEmergency MedicineAnesthesiologyCardiovascular Imaging
Esophageal motility disorders may be an important cause of noncardiac chest pain. To improve our diagnostic yield, we studied the use of edrophonium as a provocative test for inducing esophageal chest pain in 50 symptomatic patients without coronary artery disease and in 25 age-matched controls. Edrophonium (80 micrograms/kg of body weight, intravenous bolus) induced chest pain in 15 (30%) patients and in no controls. Edrophonium increased esophageal amplitude and repetitive contractions to a similar degree in all subjects, but the change in duration (101 +/- 13% [SE] was significantly greater (p less than 0.02) in patients in whom chest pain was induced. Drug specificity was assessed in 9 patients during cardiac catheterization, but no significant change was seen in coronary artery diameter, blood pressure, or heart rate. Further clinical testing using a placebo control confirmed a positivity rate of 28% in 125 unselected patients with chest pain referred to our laboratory; false-positive tests were infrequent (5.6%). No important side effects were seen. Edrophonium is useful for provoking esophageal chest pain.
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