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1.
To test the feasibility of detecting transient left ventricular regional wall motion abnormalities during exercise-induced myocardial ischemia, 55 patients undergoing diagnostic coronary arteriography were studied in a prospective blinded manner with wide angle cross-sectional echocardiography. The ultrasonic studies were obtained with the patients at rest and during exercise in the supine position using a bicycle ergometer. Cross-sectional echocardiographic studies during exercise were adequate for analysis in 43 (78 percent) of the 55 patients. Forty-one of the 43 manifested either a new regional wall motion abnormality during exercise (20 subjects) or wall motion that remained entirely normal during exercise (21 subjects); In two subjects an abnormal wall motion abnormality at rest did not change with exercise. Nineteen of the 20 patients with a new regional wall motion abnormality had significant coronary artery disease and 15 of these 19 had S-T segment depression during bicycle ergometry. The one patient with a normal coronary arteriogram had an early cardiomyopathy. Ten of the 21 subjects with normal wall motion at rest and during exercise had a normal coronary arteriogram, whereas 11 had evidence of important anatomic coronary artery disease and thus had a false negative echocardlographic findings. Six of these 11 patients had S-T segment depression during exercise. The usefulness of exercise echocardlography to predict coronary artery disease was not altered even when only 26 patients without previous myocardial infarction and with a normal cross-sectional echocardiogram at rest were considered. Thus, new regional wall motion abnormalities during exercise as identified with cross-sectional echocardiography represent a specific finding for the presence of coronary artery disease. However, normal regional wall motion during exercise does not exclude the presence of important anatomic coronary artery disease.  相似文献   

2.
Most studies investigating the ability of exercise two-dimensional echocardiography to identify patients with coronary artery disease have included patients with left ventricular wall motion abnormalities at rest. This has the effect of increasing sensitivity because patients with only abnormalities at rest are detected. To determine the diagnostic utility of exercise echocardiography in patients with normal wall motion at rest, 64 patients were studied with exercise echocardiography in conjunction with routine treadmill exercise testing before coronary cineangiography. All 24 patients who had no angiographic evidence of coronary artery disease had a negative exercise echocardiogram (100% specificity). Nine of 40 patients with coronary artery disease (defined as greater than or equal to 50% narrowing of at least one major vessel) also had a negative exercise echocardiogram (78% sensitivity). Of the nine patients with a false negative exercise echocardiographic study, six had single vessel disease. Among 25 patients with single vessel disease, exercise echocardiography was significantly more sensitive (p = 0.01) than treadmill exercise testing alone (76 versus 36%, respectively). Among 15 patients with multivessel disease, the two tests demonstrated similar sensitivity (80%). In conclusion, exercise echocardiography is highly specific and moderately sensitive for the detection of coronary artery disease in patients with normal wall motion at rest. Although exercise echocardiography is significantly more sensitive than treadmill exercise electrocardiographic testing alone in patients with single vessel disease, the two tests are similar in their ability to detect coronary artery disease in patients with multivessel disease and normal wall motion at rest.  相似文献   

3.
Impaired left ventricular performance, one of the hallmarks of coronary artery disease, can be detected by echocardiography in various ways. One of these approaches is the recording of abnormal wall motion. Because of the way in which the left ventricle can be examined echocardiographically, this technique has the capability of detecting regional wall abnormalities. In fact echocardiography is probably the most sensitive technique available, including even contrast ventriculography, for the detection of akinetic, hypokinetic or dyskinetic wall segments. With increasing experience it is apparent that more areas of the left ventricle can be examined echocardiographically than had previously been thought possible. Newer techniques include directing the ultrasonic beam not only through the body of the left ventricle but also toward the apical portion of the ventricle near the vicinity of the papillary muscles. In addition the true anterior left ventricular wall can be examined by moving the transducer laterally away from the left sternal border. Yet another approach utilizes a subxiphoid position for the transducer while the ultrasonic beam is directed through the medial portion of the septum and posterolateral wall of the left ventricle. M-mode scanning techniques together with recently developed cross-sectional echocardiographic instruments give great promise of improved detection of abnormalities of ventricular shape, especially the presence of aneurysms. The cross-sectional approach makes it possible to examine the left ventricular apex, an area virtually impossible to record with M-mode echocardiography. Recording of left ventricular dimensions and abnormal mitral valve motion may help in assessing overall left ventricular performance. A dilated left ventricular dimension in the vicinity of the mitral valve seems to be an ominous finding both in patients with acute myocardial infarction and in patients with chronic coronary disease being considered for possible surgery. Another echocardiographic sign of abnormal ventricular performance is altered closure of the mitral valve, which reflects a significantly elevated left ventricular diastolic pressure. These echocardiographic techniques are still in the investigational stages and are more technically difficult than the usual echocardiographic applications. However, the preliminary data are encouraging and make us hopeful that echocardiography will prove to be an important tool in the overall evaluation of the left ventricle in patients with coronary artery disease.  相似文献   

4.
Quantitative assessment of left ventricular function in patients with coronary artery disease was made by computer analysis of two-dimensional echocardiography performed during a cold pressor test. Short-axis cross-sectional images of the left ventricle at the levels of the mitral valve and chordae tendineae were recorded by a phase array sector scanner in 12 patients with coronary artery disease and 11 normal controls. Endocardial outlines at end-diastole and end-systole were traced and analyzed by a computer system. The short-axis cross-sectional images were divided into octants and were analyzed. The segmental area and its changes during the cardiac cycle were measured and calculated for each octant. Regional function of the left ventricle was evaluated by percent changes of segmental area. The regional segmental area changes in patients with coronary artery disease were compared with those in normal controls. Similar increments were achieved in rate pressure product in the 2 groups. In relation to the perfusing coronary arteries, 8 segments were integrated arbitrarily into 3 walls (anteroseptal wall, lateral wall, and posterior wall and posterior septum). The cold pressor test induced wall motion abnormalities in 12 of 16 walls which were supplied by stenosed coronary arteries. In contrast, wall motion abnormalities were detected in only 5 of 38 walls which were supplied by coronary arteries without significant stenotic lesions. The sensitivity of cold pressor test-induced wall motion abnormalities in detecting coronary artery disease was 75% and the specificity was 87%. No serious complications were encountered in this study. In conclusion, computer-aided cold pressor two-dimensional echocardiography is a safe and sensitive method for the assessment of left ventricular function and diagnosis of coronary artery disease.  相似文献   

5.
The purpose of this study was to determine the diagnostic value of quantitative two-dimensional echocardiography during transesophageal atrial pacing in assessing the presence and severity of coronary artery disease. Apical four- and two-chamber views were registered at rest and at different pacing rates. Computerized quantitative evaluation of left ventricle wall motion was performed. On the basis of left ventricle wall motion analysis data of 22 individuals with no coronary pathology, as assessed by angiography and with negative exercise ECG and transesophageal atrial pacing ECG test, nomograms for assessment of wall motion abnormalities and for calculation of asynergy area as a measure of wall motion abnormality extent were obtained. The method revealed new transient wall motion abnormalities during pacing or exacerbation of old ones present at rest in 83 of the 89 patients with angiographically proven coronary artery stenosis greater than or equal to 70% and in 3 of the 32 controls with no changes in their coronary angiograms. Thus, it showed high sensitivity (93%), specificity (91%), predictive value of positive result (96%), predictive value of negative result (83%), and efficiency of the test (93%). These values appeared to be higher than those calculated for transesophageal atrial pacing ECG, recorded simultaneously with echocardiographic images (81, 87, 95, 62, and 83%, respectively) and for exercise ECG test which was performed in 66 coronary patients and in 29 controls (68, 86, 92, 54, and 74%, respectively). The extent of pacing-induced left ventricular regional wall motion abnormalities appeared to be directly correlated to the extent of coronary artery disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
There has been only modest clinical interest in exercise echocardiography because of the technical limitations of the procedure. Recognizing that there have been recent technical advances in the echocardiographic instruments and that echocardiography should, in theory, be an ideal technique for evaluating exercise-induced wall motion abnormalities, a clinically practical method of performing exercise echocardiograms was developed. By obtaining the echocardiograms immediately after treadmill exercise, with the patient sitting at the treadmill, a high percent of studies adequate for interpretation was obtained (92%). The addition of echocardiography to the treadmill exercise test significantly enhanced the diagnostic yield. In addition, in cases of one and three vessel disease, exercise echocardiography identified stenosis in specific coronary arteries. In patients with two vessel disease and left circumflex obstruction, specific vessel identification was less reliable. A high percent of patients with multivessel disease developed wall motion abnormalities with exercise that persisted for at least 30 minutes. It is concluded that echocardiography performed immediately after exercise with the new generation of echocardiographs can be a practical and useful clinical tool.  相似文献   

7.
Two-dimensional echocardiography was performed at rest and during rapid transesophageal atrial pacing in 85 patients undergoing coronary arteriography for evaluation of chest pain. Transesophageal atrial pacing was performed with 10 ms pulses of 6 to 27 mA intensity; the rate was progressively increased up to 150 beats/min. Four patients were excluded: two because atrial capture was not achieved and two because of chest discomfort induced during transesophageal atrial pacing. Of the remaining 81 patients, 56 had significant coronary artery disease (greater than or equal to 75% stenosis of at least one major coronary vessel) and 25 had no significant coronary artery disease; 25 of the 56 patients with coronary artery disease had no wall motion abnormalities at rest. The test was considered positive if wall motion abnormalities were detected during pacing. Wall motion abnormalities occurred in 3 of 25 patients without coronary artery disease (specificity 88%) and in 51 of 56 patients with coronary artery disease (sensitivity 91%). Wall motion abnormalities developed in 20 of the 25 patients with coronary artery disease and normal regional wall motion at rest (sensitivity 80%); sensitivity for one, two and three vessel disease was 85% (17 of 20 patients), 94% (15 of 16 patients) and 95% (19 of 20 patients), respectively. In patients without coronary artery disease, wall motion score was 18 at rest and 17.7 +/- 0.9 during pacing (p = NS). In patients with coronary artery disease, wall motion score decreased from 15.2 +/- 3.6 at rest to 11.6 +/- 4.1 during pacing (p less than 0.001). In patients with coronary artery disease and normal regional wall motion at rest, wall motion score decreased from 18 at rest to 14.4 +/- 3.1 during pacing (p less than 0.001). Thus, two-dimensional echocardiography during transesophageal atrial pacing appears both sensitive and specific in detecting patients with coronary artery disease. This new procedure is a feasible and reliable alternative to exercise two-dimensional echocardiography.  相似文献   

8.
Exercise-induced regional wall motion abnormalities on radionuclide angiography have been thought to be a reliable indicator of coronary artery disease. To evaluate their reliability, particularly in patients with valvular heart disease, exercise radionuclide angiography was performed in 12 normal subjects, 35 patients with coronary artery disease and 19 patients with valvular heart disease and normal coronary arteries. Exercise-induced regional wall motion abnormalities were found in none of the normal subjects, 63 percent of the patients with coronary artery disease and 42 percent of those with valvular heart disease and were predominantly inferoapical in location in the group with valvular heart disease. We conclude that exercise-induced regional wall motion abnormalities are not reliable for the detection of coronary artery disease in patients with valvular heart disease.  相似文献   

9.
Myocardial stunning (postischemic ventricular dysfunction) occurs in dogs after coronary stenosis following treadmill exercise. Less data are available in humans regarding development of stunned myocardium after exercise. Regional wall motion changes were evaluated in 22 patients with known coronary artery disease using 2-dimensional echocardiography and exercise treadmill testing. Wall motion was scored as 1 = normal, 2 = hypokinetic, 3 = akinetic, 4 = dyskinetic. At least 1 left ventricular segment with normal resting function developed an increase in wall motion score at 15 or 30 minutes compared with values at rest. The wall motion score in the midportion of the ventricular septum increased from 1.0 at rest to 1.6 (p less than 0.004) at 30 minutes after exercise; the basal inferior wall score worsened from 1.0 at rest to 1.9 (p less than 0.01) at 30 minutes after exercise. Coronary angiographic data in these patients revealed that left anterior descending narrowing correlated best with left ventricular septal wall motion abnormalities, whereas right coronary artery and circumflex narrowing best correlated with inferior and posterior wall motion abnormalities. Eight normal adult volunteers with no history of myocardial ischemia also underwent 2-dimensional echocardiography and exercise testing. No wall motion abnormalities were observed at any time after exercise. The present study suggests that in patients with coronary artery disease, exercise treadmill testing may induce regional wall motion abnormalities of the left ventricle that persist greater than or equal to 30 minutes after exercise, an observation consistent with the phenomenon of stunned myocardium.  相似文献   

10.
Studies were made of the feasibility and value of two dimensional echocardiography in detecting left ventricular asynergy during handgrip exercise in 45 patients with suspected coronary artery disease. Resting echocardiography revealed normal wall motion in 32 patients, and in 17 of these handgrip exercise induced abnormal wall motion. All 17 patients had significant stenoses in the coronary arteries. However, only 65 percent of patients with coronary artery disease whose resting two dimensional echocardiogram revealed normal wall motion showed abnormal wall motion during handgrip exercise. The left ventricular wall visualized in the short axis plane was divided into 5 segments, and a total of 225 segments were analyzed. Of 49 segments with exercise-induced asynergy, 46 (94 percent) reflected significant stenosis in the perfusing coronary artery. In particular, 16 (89 percent) of 18 segments with exercise-induced akinesia reflected stenosis of greater than 90 percent. Resting or exercise two dimensional echocardiography (or both) was able to diagnose multivessel disease with a predictability of 92 percent. It is concluded that two dimensional echocardiography combined with handgrip exercise has high specificity in detecting coronary artery disease and would be useful for predicting severely stenotic or multivessel coronary arterial lesions.  相似文献   

11.
We have assessed the usefulness of dobutamine infusion for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease by using two-dimensional echocardiography and 12-lead electrocardiogram. Dobutamine was infused at incremental doses (up to a maximum of 40 micrograms kg-1 min-1) in 52 patients with chest pain; all the patients underwent coronary angiography; significant coronary artery disease was quantitatively defined as greater than or equal to 50% diameter stenosis. Thirty-six patients were on betablockers. The test was considered positive when new regional wall motion abnormalities appeared during dobutamine infusion. No significant side effects occurred in any patient during the test. Transient wall motion abnormalities were detected in 20 of 37 patients with coronary artery disease (sensitivity = 54%); ischaemic ST segment changes were present on ECG in nine patients (sensitivity = 24%). Dobutamine stress echocardiography was negative in 12 of 15 patients with coronary artery diameter stenosis less than 50% (specificity = 80%). Exercise electrocardiography (ECG) was performed in 35 of these 52 patients. Maximum heart rate and systolic blood pressure were significantly higher during exercise than during dobutamine stress test (127 +/- 23 vs 99 +/- 24 beats min-1, P less than 0.0001; 179 +/- 25 vs 152 +/- 30 mmHg, P less than 0.0001). The exercise ECG test was positive in 12 of the 26 patients with significant coronary artery disease (sensitivity = 46%), and dobutamine stress echocardiography in 16 (sensitivity = 62%). Dobutamine stress echocardiography test is a safe and feasible diagnostic test for the noninvasive diagnosis of coronary artery disease and can be performed in patients unable to exercise.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND. Two-dimensional echocardiography performed during dobutamine infusion has been proposed as a potentially useful method for detecting coronary artery disease. However, the safety and diagnostic value of dobutamine stress echocardiography has not been established. METHODS AND RESULTS. In this study, echocardiograms were recorded during step-wise infusion of dobutamine to a maximum dose of 30 micrograms/kg/min in 103 patients who also underwent quantitative coronary angiography. The echocardiograms were digitally stored and displayed in a format that allowed simultaneous analysis of rest and stress images. Development of a new abnormality in regional function was used as an early end point for the dobutamine infusion. No patient had a symptomatic arrhythmia or complications from stress-induced ischemia. Significant coronary artery disease (greater than or equal to 50% diameter stenosis) was present in 35 of 55 patients who had normal echocardiograms at rest. The sensitivity and specificity of dobutamine-induced wall motion abnormalities for coronary artery disease was 89% (31 of 35) and 85% (17 of 20), respectively. The sensitivity was 81% (17 of 21) in those with one-vessel disease and 100% (14 of 14) in those with multivessel or left main disease. Forty-one of 48 patients with abnormal echocardiograms at baseline had localized rest wall motion abnormalities. Fifteen had coronary artery disease confined to regions that had abnormal rest wall motion, and 26 had disease remote from these regions. Thirteen of 15 patients (87%) without remote disease did not develop remote stress-induced abnormalities, and 21 of 26 (81%) who had remote disease developed corresponding abnormalities. CONCLUSIONS. Echocardiography combined with dobutamine infusion is a safe and accurate method for detecting coronary artery disease and for predicting the extent of disease in those who have localized rest wall motion abnormalities.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVES. This study was designed to assess the temporal relation between early coronary artery abnormalities and left ventricular function in Kawasaki disease. BACKGROUND. Although late segmental wall motion abnormalities may be seen in patients with Kawasaki disease who have coronary artery stenosis, the impact of early coronary artery abnormalities is unclear. METHODS. Regional left ventricular wall motion was assessed by two-dimensional echocardiography in 18 patients with Kawasaki disease and echocardiographic evidence of coronary artery enlargement at 3 weeks and 3 months and at either 6 or 12 months after the onset of fever. Four patients had a persistent left coronary artery aneurysm, four had regression of their aneurysm, two had persistent left coronary artery ectasia and eight had regression of ectasia. Left ventricular wall motion was assessed by measuring regional area change in parasternal and apical views. After planimetry of an end-systolic and an end-diastolic frame, the ventricle was divided into eight equal segments and the percent area change was calculated. A floating system correcting for translation and rotation was applied. The measurements in the patient group were compared with values previously obtained in 55 normal age-matched infants and children. RESULTS. A transient regional wall motion abnormality 3 and 6 months after the onset of fever was discovered in the inferolateral wall of one patient with a persistent left coronary artery aneurysm. One patient with regression of coronary artery ectasia had a persistent wall motion abnormality in the anterolateral left ventricular wall. There was no correlation between the extent of coronary artery enlargement and the presence or absence of wall motion abnormalities. CONCLUSIONS. These early changes are most likely secondary to associated myocarditis rather than coronary artery abnormalities.  相似文献   

14.
To determine the accuracy of two-dimensional echocardiography (2-D echo) for assessment of exercise-induced wall motion abnormalities in patients with coronary artery disease, the results of stress echocardiography were compared with exercise cineventriculography. In 56 consecutive patients, biplane cineventriculography at rest and immediately after supine bicycle exercise was performed. Cross-sectional echo was obtained using the apical two- and four-chamber-views for left ventricular imaging under identical conditions. In 6 of the 56 patients 2-D echo, in 8 patients cineventriculogram, and in 2 patients both methods were of inadequate quality at rest or during exercise. Of the remaining 40 patients, 34 had coronary artery disease. Local wall motion in 360 wall segments from these patients was analyzed. In 49 segments (14%) in 24 of these patients exercise-induced ischemic wall motion abnormalities were evident during cineventriculography. Only 24 of these 49 asynergies (49%) were also recognized by 2-D echo. Using cross-sectional echocardiography, ischemia-related wall motion abnormalities were best detected septal, whereas apical asynergies were identified in only 3 of 12 segments (25%). Thus, the clinical value of exercise 2-D echo as a screening method in patients suspected of having coronary artery disease is limited and restricted to patients where excellent visualization of the left ventricular endocardium is possible.  相似文献   

15.
The value of transthoracic dipyridamole echocardiography has been extensively documented. However, in some patients, because of a poor acoustic window, the rest transthoracic examination is not always feasible and the transesophageal approach is more convenient. Therefore, transesophageal echocardiography with high dose dipyridamole (up to 0.84 mg/kg body weight over 10 min) was performed in 32 patients in whom the transthoracic dipyridamole test either was not feasible (n = 29) or yielded ambiguous results (n = 3). The transesophageal echocardiographic test results were considered abnormal when new dipyridamole-induced regional wall motion abnormalities were observed. All 32 patients underwent coronary angiography; significant coronary artery disease was defined as greater than or equal to 70% lumen diameter narrowing in at least one major vessel. All patients also performed a bicycle exercise test 1 day before transesophageal dipyridamole echocardiography. Transesophageal stress studies were completed in all patients, with a maximal imaging time (in tests with a negative result) of 20 min. No side effects or intolerance to drug or transducer was observed. The left ventricle was always visualized in the four-chamber and transgastric short-axis views. High quality two-dimensional echocardiographic images were obtained in all patients both at rest and at peak dipyridamole infusion and were digitally analyzed in a quad-screen format. Coronary angiography showed coronary artery obstruction in 24 patients: 6 had single-, 9 double- and 9 triple-vessel disease. The transesophageal dipyridamole test showed a specificity of 100% and an overall sensitivity of 92%. The sensitivity of this test for single-, double- and triple-vessel disease was 67%, 100% and 100%, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Prevalence of coronary artery disease requires sensitive diagnostic methods for screening and follow-up. The sensitivity of stress-ECG is low, 201-thallium scintigraphy is more sensitive but has the disadvantages of radiation and costs. Improved echocardiographic resolution with better identification of endocardial border as well as digital imaging technique have increased the interest in stress echocardiography as a diagnostic tool in coronary artery disease since a decade ago the clinical usefulness of stress echocardiography has been demonstrated. For stress echocardiography a semisupine bicycle position for continuous recording of echocardiographic images from the apical position in the two-chamber- and RAO-view was developed. Echocardiographic images were digitized with a frame rate of 30/s and stored on optical discs with a storage capacity of 1 Gbyte. Rest and exercise images were analysed simultaneously for newly-occurring wall motion abnormalities or deterioration of already present hypokinesia or extension of existing wall motion abnormalities. Segmental wall motion was scored according to the scheme in Figure 2. In addition end-diastolic, end-systolic volume, and ejection fraction were calculated. In a patient population of 150, 30 female and 120 male, age 56.6 +/- 8.3 years, we could confirm the results reported by other working groups and demonstrate a high sensitivity in the diagnosis of single vessel disease. Our technique with the patient cycling in semi-supine position allows continuous echocardiographic registration during exercise and offers adequate image quality. The mean workload at peak stress was 127 +/- 30 watts, the maximal heart rate 137 +/- 18 bpm. Digital cine-loop imaging allowed evaluation of the examinations in about 90% of the cases. The sensitivity in the whole study group was 87%, the specificity 80%. Under full antianginal medication, 43% of the patients developed angina pectoris during exercise and 58% had a positive stress-ECG. The sensitivity in single-vessel coronary artery disease was 93% for the left anterior descending, 80% for the left circumflex, and 83% for the right coronary artery. These results in single-vessel disease were superior compared to findings of other authors using different techniques of stress echocardiography. In addition to the qualitative analysis, quantitative measurement of end-systolic volume and ejection fraction seems to be important. We found a significantly more pronounced decrease of ejection fraction at peak exercise in patients with multivessel disease compared to those with single-vessel disease. In single-vessel disease ejection fraction was 61 +/- 12% at rest and 57 +/- 17% during exercise, this difference was not significant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Two-dimensional echocardiography at rest was used to analyze segmental wall motion abnormalities for detecting coronary artery disease in patients with and without a history of myocardial infarction. One hundred twenty-five echocardiograms were analyzed in a randomized, blinded fashion. They were obtained from 55 consecutive patients found to have significant coronary artery disease at angiography, 59 consecutive normal subjects and 11 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. The overall sensitivity of two-dimensional echocardiography was relatively low at 67%. However, specificity was 99%. The sensitivity was higher in patients with past myocardial infarction than in those without myocardial infarction (81 versus 42%), as expected. Echocardiography can detect segmental wall motion abnormalities in some patients with coronary artery disease and no overt prior myocardial infarction. This was highlighted by nine such patients with coronary artery disease and no prior myocardial infarction or electrocardiographic Q waves who were found to have segmental wall motion abnormalities. A semiquantitative, two-dimensional echocardiographic segmental wall motion score was derived for 47 patients and was correlated with angiographic left ventricular ejection fraction (r = 0.71). This score differentiated patients with a normal ejection fraction (greater than 50%) from those with a depressed ejection fraction (less than 50%): 1.1 +/- 1.6 versus 6.9 +/- 3.1 (p less than 0.001). Almost all patients (92%) with an echocardiographic score of five or more had an abnormal ejection fraction of less than 50%. In patients with chronic congestive heart failure, the echocardiogram separated those with dilated cardiomyopathy from those with coronary artery disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The results of exercise radionuclide angiography in 29 patients with significant left main coronary artery stenosis were examined to correlate functional left ventricular performance with anatomic severity of left main coronary artery stenosis. Change in ejection fraction, regional wall motion, and peak ejection fraction were widely variable; none of these parameters correlated with severity of left main stenosis as assessed by visual or quantitative angiographic methods. Twenty-five patients (86%) had two or more of the following indicators of ischemia with exercise: chest pain, significant ST-segment depression, systolic hypotension, definite decrease in ejection fraction, or definite decline in regional wall motion. However, four patients (14%) had only mild abnormalities in ejection fraction and regional wall motion, although they did have hemodynamic and electrocardiographic evidence of severe ischemia. Exercise radionuclide angiography yields heterogeneous results in patients with significant left main coronary artery stenosis. Anatomically severe left main coronary artery stenosis is not always associated with mechanical evidence of severe ischemia.  相似文献   

19.
First pass radionuclide angiocardiography and thallium-201 myocardial perfusion imaging were performed at rest and during exercise in 48 patients with chest pain: 39 with angiographically documented coronary artery disease and 9 with normal coronary arteries. Maximal graded upright bicycle exercise was used for both studies to assure identical exercise conditions. All nine patients without coronary artery disease had normal exercise thallium images, normal exercise regional wall motion and at least a 5 percent absolute increase in left ventricular ejection fraction during exercise (normal exercise left ventricular reserve). Ischemic S-T segment depression was demonstrated in 17 (44 percent) of the 39 patients with coronary artery disease. Findings on the two exercise tests were concordant in all cases. New or augmented thallium perfusion defects were detected in 24 (62 percent) of the 39 patients, whereas abnormal exercise left ventricular reserve was present in 33 (85 percent) (p <0.05). There was a close concordance between exercise-induced perfusion defects and regional wall motion abnormalities. The magnitude of change in ejection fraction from rest to exercise was significantly greater in patients with an abnormal exercise thallium study than in those with a normal study (−8 ± 2 percent versus −1 ± 1 percent, p <0.05). Both radionuclide studies were abnormal In 21 (54 percent) of the 39 patients, whereas both were normal only in 3 patients, all of whom had single vessel disease. Abnormal exercise left ventricular reserve was present in 12 patients with normal exercise thallium studies.  相似文献   

20.
To assess the prognostic value of exercise echocardiography in patients with prior coronary artery bypass surgery, follow-up was obtained in 718 patients (591 men [82%] and 127 women [18%], aged 67 +/- 9 years) who underwent clinically indicated exercise echocardiography 5.7 +/- 4.7 years after coronary bypass surgery. Resting wall motion abnormalities were present in 479 patients (67%). New or worsening wall motion abnormalities developed with exercise in 366 patients (51%). During a median follow-up of 2.9 years, cardiac events included cardiac death in 36 patients and nonfatal myocardial infarction in 40 patients. The addition of the exercise echocardiographic variables, abnormal left ventricular end-systolic volume response and exercise ejection fraction to the clinical, resting echocardiographic and exercise electrocardiographic model provided incremental information in predicting cardiac events (chi-square 37 to chi-square 42, p = 0.02) and cardiac death (chi-square 38 to chi-square 43, p <0.02). Exercise echocardiography provides prognostic information in patients after coronary artery bypass surgery, incremental to clinical, rest echocardiographic, and exercise electrocardiographic variables.  相似文献   

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