Concepedia

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Silent ischemia after myocardial infarction. Prognosis, mechanism, and intervention.

14

Citations

0

References

1990

Year

Abstract

Asymptomatic ischemia after myocardial infarction is a common clinical problem. As much as 50% of the postinfarction patient population who have ischemia on exercise testing may have no symptoms at all. In these patients, ischemia detected by either exercise testing or ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring, with or without symptoms, confers a worse prognosis. The mechanism of silent ischemia in this group of patients may be due to the deprivation of afferent innervations created by critically placed infarctions. The management of these postinfarction patients must be centered on the treatment of ischemia, regardless of symptoms.