Circulation, Vol 81, 72-77, Copyright © 1990 by American Heart Association
E Picano, G De Pieri, JA Salerno, E Arbustini, A Distante, L Martinelli, A Pucci, C Montemartini, M Vigano and L Donato
Acute cardiac rejection, syndrome X, and arterial hypertension can induce
small vessel damage and, therefore, restriction of coronary reserve in the
presence of normal epicardial coronary arteries. A characteristic response
pattern to dipyridamole (DIP) infusion has been previously described in
syndrome X and arterial hypertension: ST segment depression without any
measurable systolic dysfunction. The aim of this study was to establish
whether acute cardiac rejection might induce electrocardiographic
alterations during DIP infusion. Changes in the 12-lead electrocardiogram
and two-dimensional echocardiogram during high-dose DIP infusion (up to
0.84 mg/kg in 10 minutes) were evaluated within 24 hours of endomyocardial
biopsy in 14 transplanted patients. A total of 47 biopsy-controlled DIP
studies were performed within 5 weeks after cardiac transplantation. For
each patient, at least 7 days elapsed between two consecutive studies.
Electrocardiographic and echocardiographic tracings were analyzed without
prior knowledge of endomyocardial biopsy findings. No remarkable side
effects occurred in any case, so that the DIP study could be completed in
all patients. A diagnostic (greater than 0.1 mV) ST segment depression was
found in 11 studies. The sensitivity and specificity of DIP-induced ST
segment depression for the detection of biopsy-proven acute rejection were
72% and 94%, respectively. These data show that DIP stress is feasible and
safe in transplanted patients and that acute cardiac rejection can be
accompanied by DIP-induced ST segment depression without detectable
impairment in systolic function. These changes might provide noninvasive
markers for surveillance of rejection.
ARTICLES
Electrocardiographic changes suggestive of myocardial ischemia elicited by dipyridamole infusion in acute rejection early after heart transplantation
Department of Cardiology and Cardiosurgery, University of Pavia, Italy.
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