1 From the Cardiovascular Research Laboratories, Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health; and the Levine Cardiac Unit, Cardiovascular Division, Department of Medicine, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Treadmill exercise testing and prolonged ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring were compared for their ability to reveal ventricular ectopic activity in 81 patients. Both proved more effective than a 3-minute standard electrocardiogram (ECG) in displaying ventricular arrhythmias. Of 66 patients in whom the resting ECG was normal, prolonged monitoring was positive for arrhythmia in 18, or 27%, whereas exercise was positive in 26, or 39%. In 12 cases ventricular arrhythmia was recorded only with exercise. In addition to displaying an increased incidence of arrhythmia, exercise also revealed more serious rhythm abnormalities which would not have been suspected on monitoring alone. This was true in patients with and without coronary heart disease (CHD). Thus, exercise is an effective means of eliciting suspected arrhythmias. The prognostic significance of exercise-induced arrhythmias in patients with CHD remains to be determined.
Submitted on April 30, 1971
© 1971 American Heart Association, Inc.
Occurrence of Ventricular Arrhythmias with Exercise as Compared to Monitoring
Key Words: Electrocardiogram Ventricular premature beats Arrhythmia Coronary heart disease
Accepted on July 23, 1971
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