Pathogenesis and Treatment of Coronary Microvascular Disease in Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine: A Review
10.13422/j.cnki.syfjx.20230136
- VernacularTitle:冠状动脉微血管疾病的中西医发病机制和治疗进展
- Author:
Zihan LI
1
;
Rong YUAN
2
;
Qiqi XIN
2
;
Yu MIAO
2
;
Weihong CONG
2
Author Information
1. Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Tianjin 301617, China
2. National Clinical Research Center for Chinese Medicine Cardiology, Xiyuan Hospital of Chinese Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing 100091, China
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
coronary microvascular disease (CMVD);
ischemic heart disease;
abnormal coronary microvascular function;
microcirculation;
traditional Chinese medicine (TCM)
- From:
Chinese Journal of Experimental Traditional Medical Formulae
2023;29(9):252-260
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
In recent years, coronary microvascular disease (CMVD), a main type of ischemic heart disease with high incidence and low diagnosis rate, has become a new research hotspot and received much clinical attention. The etiology of CMVD is complex and the symptoms are various. Traditional Chinese and Western medicine have different opinions on its pathogenesis and treatment plan. Western medicine believes that CMVD is related to structural abnormalities (such as microvascular remodeling, vascular invasion, lumen obstruction, sparse vascular vessel and perivascular fibrosis) and functional abnormalities (such as endothelial dysfunction, smooth muscle cell dysfunction, microvascular constriction, microvascular spasm, inflammation and autonomic nervous dysfunction) of coronary microvascular vessels as well as the extravascular factors (such as heart rate and blood pressure). In clinics, conventional western medicines are usually used for empirical treatment, but with undesirable effects. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) believes that CMVD belongs to the category of "chest impediment", "heart pain" and "collateral disease", and the common syndromes include Qi deficiency and blood stasis, Qi stagnation and blood stasis, Qi and Yin deficiency, congealing cold in heart vessel, heart and spleen deficiency, blood stasis obstructing collaterals, combined phlegm and blood stasis, and liver and kidney deficiency, with a variety of treatment methods. Specifically, Chinese patent medicines, self-designed prescriptions, modified classical prescriptions and TCM characteristic therapies have achieved certain effects. This review discussed the risk factors, pathological mechanism, TCM etiology and pathogenesis and traditional Chinese and Western medicine treatment of CMVD, to provide reference for the study and treatment of CMVD.