Obstructive disease of the epicardial coronary arteries is the main cause of angina. However, a number of patients with anginal symptoms have normal coronaries or non-obstructive coronary artery disease despite electrocardiographic evidence of ischemia during stress testing. In addition to limited microvascular vasodilator capacity, the coronary microcirculation of these patients is particularly sensitive to vasoconstrictor stimuli, in a condition known as microvascular angina. This review briefly summarizes the determinants and control of coronary blood flow and myocardial perfusion. It subsequently analyzes the mechanisms responsible for transient myocardial ischemia: obstructive coronary artery disease, coronary spasm and coronary microvascular dysfunction in the absence of epicardial coronary lesions, and variable combinations of structural anomalies, impaired endothelium-dependent and/or -independent vasodilation, and enhanced perception of pain. Lastly, we exemplify mechanism of angina during tachycardia. Distal to a coronary stenosis, coronary dilator reserve is already recruited and can be nearly exhausted at rest distal to a severe stenosis. Increased heart rate reduces the duration of diastole and thus coronary blood flow when metabolic vasodilation is no longer able to increase coronary blood flow. The increase in myocardial oxygen consumption and resulting metabolic vasodilation in adjacent myocardium without stenotic coronary arteries further acts to divert blood flow away from the post-stenotic coronary vascular bed through collaterals.
The many faces of myocardial ischemia and angina / Levy, Bernard I; Heusch, Gerd; Camici, Paolo G. - In: CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH. - ISSN 0008-6363. - (2019). [Epub ahead of print] [10.1093/cvr/cvz160]
The many faces of myocardial ischemia and angina
Camici, Paolo G
2019-01-01
Abstract
Obstructive disease of the epicardial coronary arteries is the main cause of angina. However, a number of patients with anginal symptoms have normal coronaries or non-obstructive coronary artery disease despite electrocardiographic evidence of ischemia during stress testing. In addition to limited microvascular vasodilator capacity, the coronary microcirculation of these patients is particularly sensitive to vasoconstrictor stimuli, in a condition known as microvascular angina. This review briefly summarizes the determinants and control of coronary blood flow and myocardial perfusion. It subsequently analyzes the mechanisms responsible for transient myocardial ischemia: obstructive coronary artery disease, coronary spasm and coronary microvascular dysfunction in the absence of epicardial coronary lesions, and variable combinations of structural anomalies, impaired endothelium-dependent and/or -independent vasodilation, and enhanced perception of pain. Lastly, we exemplify mechanism of angina during tachycardia. Distal to a coronary stenosis, coronary dilator reserve is already recruited and can be nearly exhausted at rest distal to a severe stenosis. Increased heart rate reduces the duration of diastole and thus coronary blood flow when metabolic vasodilation is no longer able to increase coronary blood flow. The increase in myocardial oxygen consumption and resulting metabolic vasodilation in adjacent myocardium without stenotic coronary arteries further acts to divert blood flow away from the post-stenotic coronary vascular bed through collaterals.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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