HealthCareMagic is now Ask A Doctor - 24x7 | https://www.askadoctor24x7.com

question-icon

What Causes Cardiac Angina When The EKG Report Shows Normal?

default
Posted on Mon, 20 Mar 2017
Question: Dr. have presser -angina ? over hart area when exerting rest subsides it lately constant at times been to cardio dr. many test he said all was well? no blockages hart is working well? primary dr. EKG normal blood test good blood presser good I am 59 yrs please if you can shed some light
doctor
Answered by Dr. Ilir Sharka (1 hour later)
Brief Answer:
I would explain as follows:

Detailed Answer:
Hello!

Welcome on HCM!

I passed carefully through your recent complaints and would like to explain that your clinical symptomatology represents clinical components specific for exertional cardiac angina (chest pain that appears when exerting but subsides while at rest), but also nonspecific elements (persistently constant chest pain).

So, coming to this point, it is necessary to perform a careful differential diagnosis investigating potential cardiac or extra-cardiac reasons.

As your ECG at rest has resulted normal, additional cardiac tests are recommended for exploring potential coronary artery disease:

- cardiac ultrasound (exploring cardiac structure and potential pericardial effusion),
- exercise cardiac stress test (in order to reproduce conditions for discriminating a potential stable cardiac angina).

Also, other additional tests for exploring alternative responsible factors of your chest pain could be helpful:

- chest X ray study,
- backbone imagine study (MRI or CT in case a degenerative backbone disorder is suspected),
- PCR & ESR (for ruling out/in inflammation in case of costochondritis, etc.)
- pulmonary function test
- arterial blood gas analysis
- pulmonary angio CT or ventilation/perfusion lung scan (in case pulmonary embolism is suspected)


If no extracardiac causes are detected and there exists still suspicion about coronary artery disease, then

- a coronary angio CT, or
- nuclear perfusional cardiac stress test, or
- dobutamine cardiac ECHO

would be recommended for further cardiac investigation.

You need to discuss with your attending cardiologist on the above mentioned issues.

Hope to have been helpful to you!

In case of any further questions, feel free to ask me again.

Kind regards,

Dr. Iliri
Note: For further queries related to coronary artery disease and prevention, click here.

Above answer was peer-reviewed by : Dr. Chakravarthy Mazumdar
doctor
Answered by
Dr.
Dr. Ilir Sharka

Cardiologist

Practicing since :2001

Answered : 9536 Questions

premium_optimized

The User accepted the expert's answer

Share on

Get personalised answers from verified doctor in minutes across 80+ specialties

159 Doctors Online

By proceeding, I accept the Terms and Conditions

HCM Blog Instant Access to Doctors
HCM Blog Questions Answered
HCM Blog Satisfaction
What Causes Cardiac Angina When The EKG Report Shows Normal?

Brief Answer: I would explain as follows: Detailed Answer: Hello! Welcome on HCM! I passed carefully through your recent complaints and would like to explain that your clinical symptomatology represents clinical components specific for exertional cardiac angina (chest pain that appears when exerting but subsides while at rest), but also nonspecific elements (persistently constant chest pain). So, coming to this point, it is necessary to perform a careful differential diagnosis investigating potential cardiac or extra-cardiac reasons. As your ECG at rest has resulted normal, additional cardiac tests are recommended for exploring potential coronary artery disease: - cardiac ultrasound (exploring cardiac structure and potential pericardial effusion), - exercise cardiac stress test (in order to reproduce conditions for discriminating a potential stable cardiac angina). Also, other additional tests for exploring alternative responsible factors of your chest pain could be helpful: - chest X ray study, - backbone imagine study (MRI or CT in case a degenerative backbone disorder is suspected), - PCR & ESR (for ruling out/in inflammation in case of costochondritis, etc.) - pulmonary function test - arterial blood gas analysis - pulmonary angio CT or ventilation/perfusion lung scan (in case pulmonary embolism is suspected) If no extracardiac causes are detected and there exists still suspicion about coronary artery disease, then - a coronary angio CT, or - nuclear perfusional cardiac stress test, or - dobutamine cardiac ECHO would be recommended for further cardiac investigation. You need to discuss with your attending cardiologist on the above mentioned issues. Hope to have been helpful to you! In case of any further questions, feel free to ask me again. Kind regards, Dr. Iliri