Circulation, Vol 65, 106-114, Copyright © 1982 by American Heart Association
SH Rahimtoola
Many studies have demonstrated that coronary artery bypass surgery combined
with medical therapy produces a greater degree of improvement in the
symptomatic state and in the functional class of the patients with severe
coronary artery disease than does medical therapy alone. This can be
objectively documented by an improvement in the exercise capacity and by an
increase in heart rate and blood pressure attained at the higher level of
exercise. The improvement is the result of relief of exercise-induced (and
resting) myocardial ischemia documented by increases in heart rate and
blood pressure, greater lactate extraction across the myocardium,
improvement in left ventricular dysfunction, abolition of exertional
hypotension, and by reversal of exercise-induced and of resting
thallium-201 defects. Results of coronary bypass surgery performed during
1974-1979 are better than those during 1969-1973.
ARTICLES
Postoperative exercise response in the evaluation of the physiologic status after coronary bypass surgery
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