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Angina Pectoris With Pharyngeal Pain Alone: A Case Report
Michiyoshi Sone*,
Eiji Tamiya,
Akiko Koizumi,
Kiyoshi Inoue,
Isao Ebihara,
Hikaru Koide,
Shinya Okazaki,
Jun Suzuki,
Hiromasa Suzuki,
and
Hiroyuki Daida
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: kmws862170{at}yahoo.co.jp.
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Abstract |
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Patients with pharyngeal pain are frequently encountered in the department of otorhinolaryngology. The pharyngeal pain is usually caused by an inflammation or a malignant disease. In some cases, anginal pain radiates to the pharynx. However, patients with angina pectoris who suffer from pharyngeal pain without chest pain are believed to be very rare. The patient was a 70-year-old man whose chief complaint was only pharyngeal pain on exertion. The pharyngeal pain was similar to acute pharyngitis with burning pain. Upon cardiac catheterization, no abnormality was found in the right coronary artery or in the circumflex artery, but 99% stenosis was found in the middle portion of the left anterior descending artery. There was no collateral circulation to the left anterior descending artery. Thus, percutaneous coronary intervention was performed, and the pharyngeal pain vanished.
First published on April 2, 2008, doi:10.1177/0003319707311537
Angiology 2009;60:259.
A more recent version of this article appeared on April 1, 2009

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