Letter: Grading of angina pectoris.
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About: This article is published in Circulation. The article was published on 01 Sep 1976. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Grading (tumors).
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Citations
Use of myocardial perfusion imaging to predict the effectiveness of coronary revascularisation in patients with stable angina pectoris
Allan Johansen,Poul Flemming Høilund-Carlsen,Henrik Wulff Christensen,Werner Vach,Mette Møldrup,Torben Haghfelt +5 more
TL;DR: In patients referred for coronary angiography owing to known or suspected stable angina, revascularisation was significantly more effective than medical treatment exclusively in patients with reversible ischaemia.
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Relation between coronary artery disease, baseline clinical variables, revascularization mode, and mortality
Arvinder S Kurbaan,Anthony F. Rickards,Charles Ilsley,Rodney A. Foale,Ulrich Sigwart,Timothy J Bowker +5 more
TL;DR: In the CABRI population, adjustment for baseline variables, including prerevascularization CAD, revealed significantly higher mortality in those who underwent PTCA than inThose who underwent coronary artery bypass grafting.
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Safety of FFR-based treatment strategies: the Munich experience.
Johannes Rieber,Philip Jung,Thomas M. Schiele,Andreas Koenig,Isabelle Erhard,Tobias Segmiller,Silke Ebel,Karl Theisen,Uwe Siebert,Volker Klauss +9 more
TL;DR: Die Sicherheit der auf FFR basierenden Therapiestratifizierung bei Patienten mit vornehmlich koronarer Mehrgefäßerkrankung and angiographisch mittelgradigen Koronarstenosen zu untersuchen ist darstellt.
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Ten-year survival of patients with mild angina or myocardial infarction without angina: A comparison of medical and surgical treatment
TL;DR: Ten-year survival percentages were calculated for groups of 407 initially medically treated patients and for 390 patients who had early coronary bypass surgery; all had either mild angina pectoris or myocardial infarction without subsequent anginapectoris.
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Myocardial sympathetic innervation in patients with chronic coronary artery disease: is reduction in coronary flow reserve correlated with sympathetic denervation?
Eva Fricke,Harald Fricke,Siegfried Eckert,Sytze Zijlstra,R. Weise,Oliver Lindner,Dieter Horstkotte,Wolfgang Burchert +7 more
TL;DR: The observed relation between HED retention and CFR indicates that sympathetic innervation can be preserved even when there is major impairment of myocardial blood supply, and most probably the occurrence of denervation depends not only on reductions in CFR, but also on the duration and severity of resulting ischaemic episodes.
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