Johns Hopkins Hospital Home
Search

 

Home

Referring Physicians

Publications

HEART & CIRCULATORY SYSTEM

Hopkins HealthLink Home

 

 

 

 

 

Making an Appointment

 

Our Locations

 

Finding a Doctor

 

Seeking New Cures

 

Educating Professionals

 

Supporting Hopkins Medicine

 

 

 

 

 

 

  CONDITION TOPICS

 

 

 

 

 

 

  OTHER HEALTH TOPICS

 

 

 

HEART AND CARDIOVASCULAR READING ROOM Heart & Circulatory System Homepage

November 13, 2001
MEDIA CONTACT: Karen Blum
PHONE: 410-955-1534
E-MAIL: kblum@jhmi.edu

Nitroglycerin Not Foolproof In Diagnosing Heart Disease
"This study has the potential to change how emergency departments triage patients with chest pain." - Nisha Chandra-Stobos, M.D.

For years, hospital emergency physicians have used nitrogylcerin as a gold standard for identifying heart disease as a cause of chest pain. If a patient presents with chest pain, and a nitroglycerin pill or spray under the tongue relieves the pain within a few minutes, the likely diagnosis is coronary artery disease (CAD).

Now a Johns Hopkins study is challenging that belief. Of 459 patients who came to the emergency department at Hopkins' Bayview Medical Center between February and June of this year complaining of chest pain, nitroglycerin relieved chest pain in about 39 percent of patients, whether or not they turned out to have heart disease. Overall, nitroglycerin was only 28 percent accurate in predicting CAD as the source of pain. These findings will be presented Nov. 12 at the American Heart Association's annual Scientific Sessions in Anaheim, Calif.

"This study has the potential to change how emergency departments triage patients with chest pain," says Nisha Chandra-Stobos, M.D., senior author of the study and director of the coronary intensive care unit at Bayview. "Our data suggest that despite the commonly held belief, pain relief with nitroglycerin does not predict coronary artery disease and should not be used to guide diagnosis."

Nitroglycerin works by relaxing the veins (reducing the amount of blood that returns to the heart and easing the heart's workload) and arteries (increasing the heart's blood supply). It's the drug most often used for the one in five patients who comes to the ED complaining of chest pain.

The patients studied had an average age of 58. Forty-six percent were male; 44 percent were smokers; 25 percent were diabetic and 38 percent had a known history of CAD. After initial treatment with nitroglycerin, 261 (57 percent) underwent further cardiac testing. In those with confirmed significant CAD, 39 percent had chest pain relief from nitroglycerin, compared with 38 percent of patients who showed no evidence of coronary artery disease. Among those diagnosed with CAD, just 34.6 percent with a known history of CAD or newly diagnosed with CAD had chest pain relief from nitroglycerin. The frequency of diabetes, traditional CAD risk factors and medication use was similar in patients with or without chest pain relief from nitroglycerin.

Charles A. Henrikson, M.D., first author of the study and a cardiology fellow at Hopkins, says, "Nitroglycerin is still fine to use for patients with chest pain, but physicians must follow them through additional testing to determine whether they truly have CAD."

Other study authors were Eric E. Howell, David E. Bush, Glenn Meininger, J. Shawn Miles and Andrew Bushnell.

 

 

Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins Medicine
U.S.News and World Report America's Best HospitalBest Graduate School 2007 US News and World Report