Abstract: | Fifty-five patients with effort angina pectoris and technically satisfactory baseline echocardiograms performed a supine exercise-echocardiography test (EET) and a high-dose dipyridamole-echocardiography test (DET, up to 0.84 mg/kg of intravenous dipyridamole in 10 minutes). All underwent coronary arteriography, which showed that at least 1 major artery had more than 70% stenosis in 34 patients. For each patient, the same physician performed both tests, with the same echocardiographic equipment. Detection of new onset or worsening regional asynergy was the only criterion of positivity for both tests. DET yielded interpretable studies in all 55 patients (100%); EET yielded only 40 such studies (73%) (p less than 0.01). In the 40 patients in whom both tests were interpretable, DET showed, compared with EET, a similar sensitivity (72% vs 76%) and specificity (100% vs 87%) (difference not significant for both) for detecting angiographically assessed coronary artery disease. In the 16 patients in whom both DET and EET yielded positive responses for ischemia, the same myocardial region showed reversible asynergy. Thus, independent of all factors that can affect the performance of each test (operator, patient and instrumentation), DET was significantly more feasible than EET, with comparable sensitivity and specificity. Dipyridamole provokes asynergy in the same regions that show ischemia during exercise. |