Stratification of single-vessel coronary stenosis by ischemic threshold at the onset of wall motion abnormality during continuous monitoring of left ventricular function by semisupine exercise echocardiography☆
Abstract
We studied the relation between the ischemic threshold at the onset of wall motion abnormality on exercise echocardiography (EE) and the severity of coronary stenosis in patients with 1-vessel coronary artery disease (CAD). We screened 216 consecutive patients who underwent coronary angiography and EE for suspected CAD. Ninety-five (74 men; age, 56 ± 12 years) satisfied the study criteria, that is, the presence of 1-vessel disease or no evidence of CAD on angiography and a normal baseline echocardiogram. Eighty-seven patients had 1-vessel CAD on angiography, and exercise-induced wall motion abnormality occurred in 73 (77%). Optimal cutoff values of percent diameter stenosis and minimal lumen diameter for predicting a positive EE were 61% (sensitivity and specificity of 76%) and 1.12 mm (sensitivity and specificity of 74%). Among patients with positive EE, heart rate-blood pressure product at ischemic threshold was correlated with quantitative coronary stenosis (r = −0.72, P < .001). The ischemic threshold from continuous monitoring of left ventricular function during semisupine EE is correlated with the severity of coronary stenosis among patients with 1-vessel disease and a normal resting echocardiogram. (J Am Soc Echocardiogr 2001;14:798-805.)
Créteil, France, and Liège, Belgium
From the Departments of Cardiology of the Henri Mondor University Hospital, Créteil, France, and the Sart-Tilman Hospital, Lièger, Belgium, (E.P.F., L.A.P.)
☆ Reprint requests: Jérôme Garot, MD, Department of Medicine, Cardiology Division, Blalock 569, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, 600 N Wolfe St, Baltimore MD, 21287-6568 (E-mail: jgarot@mail.jhmi.edu).