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Editorial Article

Anterior left ventricular wall circulation in patients with coronary artery disease

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Pages 297-301 | Received 16 Jul 1981, Accepted 26 Feb 1982, Published online: 17 Mar 2010
 

Abstract

The human anterior left ventricular circulation was investigated at rest and during submaximal atrial pacing by measuring the great cardiac venous blood flow by the constant infusion thermodilution method. Forty-seven patients with angina pectoris participated in the study and were grouped stepwise according to degree of arteriosclerosis in the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), from normal to occluded vessel. Special attention was paid to patients with earlier infarcts and to collateral circulation.

Blood flow to the myocardium was slightly but significantly reduced only among patients with a subtotal stenosis of the LAD without demonstrable collateral circulation, and only during atrial pacing. This conforms with an increased coronary arteriolar resistance in these patients. Myocardial oxygen extraction was, however, increased in all groups of patients with LAD stenosis from 50% to occlusion, except in patients with an earlier anterior wall myocardial infarction. This suggests a disproportion between oxygen demand and blood flow leading to increased extraction in patients without infarcts and a shunting of blood through scarred myocardium with a low oxygen demand in those with a previous necrosis, and is confirmed by a decreased ratio between myocardial flow and cardiac work.

Patients with an increased oxygen extraction may benefit from coronary bypass surgery to the LAD area while those without may not.

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