Skip to Content

Glossary

Starting with A for "ACE inhibitor" and continuing through to Y for "Yolk Sac Tumour", we give you succinct explanations for scientific and medical terms in clear and simple words.




A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Angina pectoris
also known as stenocardia

Name for the typical symptoms of acutely inadequate perfusion of the coronary arteries (coronary insufficiency), with sudden pain in the chest (mostly behind the breastbone), which may last for seconds or minutes. The pain radiates into the left (more rarely right) shoulder-arm-hand region , into the neck-lower jaw region or into the back. There is often a feeling of narrowness in a belt-shaped area round the chest and loss of breath, which can extend to fear of death. An attack may be triggered by physical exertion, excitement, cold or perhaps a heavy meal.

Causes
Imbalance between availability and requirement for oxygen in patients with coronary heart disease, spasm of the coronary vessels (Prinzmetal angina) or, more rarely, disturbances in the normal conditions for blood flow (high or low blood pressure, cardiac arrythmia).

Classification
1. Stable angina pectoris with pain only during exercise and of which the severity remains constant over months; 2. Unstable angina pectoris with newly occurring pain which changes or increases and which develops on mild physical exertion or even at rest; potential precursor of a myocardial infarction; 3. Prinzmetal angina. This form of angina pectoris is not the expression of the beginning of coronary disease, but usually the sign of critical constriction of the coronary vessels which is already present (more than 70 % reduction in cross-section).

Therapy
Nitroglycerin (frequently causes prompt improvement, see organic nitrates),
beta-receptor blockers, calcium antagonists, operation: see coronary heart disease

Glossary entries:  Roche and Walter de Gruyter, Berlin