Circulation, Vol 65, 265-274, Copyright © 1982 by American Heart Association
DD Waters, J Szlachcic, MG Bourassa, JM Scholl and P Theroux
Eighty-two patients with variant angina underwent a treadmill exercise test
using 14 ECG leads, and 67 also underwent exercise thallium-201 scans. The
test induced ST elevation in 25 patients (30%), ST depression in 21 (26%)
and no ST-segment abnormality in 36 (44%). ST elevation during exercise
occurred in the same ECG leads as during spontaneous attacks at rest, and
was always associated with a large perfusion defect on the exercise
thallium scan. In contrast, exercise- induced ST depression often did not
occur in the leads that exhibited ST elevation during episodes at rest. The
ST-segment response to exercise did not accurately predict coronary
anatomy: Coronary stenoses greater than or equal to 70% were present in 14
of 25 patients (56%) with ST elevation, in 13 of 21 (62%) with ST
depression and in 14 of 36 (39%) with no ST-segment abnormality (NS).
However, the degree of disease activity did correlate with the result of
the exercise test: ST elevation occurred during exercise in 11 of 14
patients who had an average of more than two spontaneous attacks per day,
in 12 of 24 who had between two attacks per day and two per week, and in
only two of 31 who had fewer than two attacks per week (p less than 0.005).
St elevation during exercise was reproducible in five of five patients
retested during an active phase of their disease, but not in three of three
patients who had been angina-free for at least 1 month before the repeat
test. Twelve patients wih exercise-induced ST elevation were retested
during treatment with calcium antagonist drugs; in 10 of 12, ST elevation
did not occur with the second test. During a mean follow- up of 20.3 +/-
14.5 months, death or myocardial infarction occurred in three of the 25
patients with ST elevation during exercise, none of 21 with ST depression
and two of 36 with no ST abnormality. We conclude that in variant angina
patients, the results of an exercise test correlate well with the degree of
disease activity but not with coronary anatomy, and do not define a
high-risk subgroup.
ARTICLES
Exercise testing in patients with variant angina: results, correlation with clinical and angiographic features and prognostic significance
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