Circulation, Vol 87, 808-814, Copyright © 1993 by American Heart Association
J Benhorin, S Banai, M Moriel, A Gavish, A Keren, S Stern and D Tzivoni
BACKGROUND. The occurrence of ischemic episodes during daily activity has
been reported to exhibit a bimodal circadian distribution, yet its relation
to the ischemic threshold (heart rate at 1-mm ST segment depression) has
not been explored. METHODS AND RESULTS. To determine whether the ischemic
threshold during daily activity exhibits a circadian pattern that might
relate to the frequency of occurrence of ischemic episodes, we studied the
time of occurrence and the heart rate at onset of ischemia in 1,371
ischemic episodes recorded in 41 patients with stable coronary disease,
positive exercise testing, and repeated ischemic episodes during ambulatory
ECG monitoring (AEM). All patients had 7 days of AEM; 23 were off any
anti-ischemic therapy, while 18 were on low dose of beta-blockers. The
occurrence of ischemic episodes exhibited the typical bimodal circadian
distribution with a prominent peak between 7:00 and 11:00 AM and a second
less prominent peak between 6:00 and 9:00 PM. The threshold of myocardial
ischemia exhibited a different single-peaked circadian distribution; it was
lowest between 1:00 and 3:00 AM and highest between 10 AM and 1 PM. Time
series analyses indicated a strong hour-by-hour trend of each of the two
circadian distributions, whereas the two series cross-correlated maximally
at a lag of zero hours (p < 0.01), indicating a complex interplay
between myocardial oxygen demand and supply in determining the occurrence
of ischemic episodes during daily activity. The morning increase in the
frequency of ischemic episodes could not be attributed to a reduced
threshold but rather to an increase in demand. The low threshold at
night-time might probably indicate that the mechanism of ischemia during
these hours is reduced coronary flow due to increased coronary tone.
Secondary analyses for several predefined patients' subsets gave similar
results. Patients who received low-dose beta- blockers maintained the
bimodal circadian distribution of the occurrence of ischemic episodes,
whereas the ischemic threshold exhibited a constant pattern with no
circadian changes. CONCLUSIONS. Our results demonstrate that myocardial
oxygen demand is a major determinant of daily ischemia, yet changes in the
ischemic threshold that probably reflect dynamic changes in coronary tone
play also an important role. The relative contribution of increased demand
and decreased threshold to the genesis of ischemic episodes during daily
activity can be assessed by AEM and may help to optimize medical therapy.
ARTICLES
Circadian variations in ischemic threshold and their relation to the occurrence of ischemic episodes
Heiden Department of Cardiology, Bikur Cholim Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel.
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