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  • Title: A negative thallium (+/- dipyridamole) stress test excludes significant obstructive epicardial coronary artery disease in hypertensive patients.
    Author: Prisant LM, von Dohlen TW, Houghton JL, Carr AA, Frank MJ.
    Journal: Am J Hypertens; 1992 Feb; 5(2):71-5. PubMed ID: 1532315.
    Abstract:
    The operating characteristics of thallium stress testing for detection of significant epicardial coronary artery disease (CAD) in hypertensive subjects with chest pain or electrocardiographic (ECG) ischemia have not been previously defined. This becomes important because of the high prevalence of both hypertensive heart disease and CAD. Ninety-two hypertensives with a history of typical or atypical chest pain or ECG myocardial ischemia underwent coronary arteriography, 2D-guided echocardiography, and thallium-201 stress testing, combined with intravenous dipyridamole if the rate-pressure product was less than 20,000. Patients with myocardial infarction, prior revascularization procedure, valvular heart disease, and chronic ethanol abuse were excluded. The mean age was 54.8 +/- 9.9 years with 55% blacks and 46% women. Eighteen patients (19.6%) had significant (greater than or equal to 50% luminal diameter narrowing) epicardial CAD at catheterization, of whom 17 had positive thallium scans. Overall, there were 17 true positives, 47 true negatives, 27 false positives, and one false negative resulting in 94.4 +/- 5.4% sensitivity (95% confidence limits [95% CL] 71 to 100%), 63.5 +/- 5.6% specificity (95% CL 51 to 74%), 38.6 +/- 7.3% positive predictive value (95% CL 25 to 54%), 97.9 +/- 2.1% negative predictive value (95% CL 88 to 100%), and 69.6 +/- 4.8% overall accuracy (95% CL 59 to 79%). For hypertensive patients with chest pain or ECG myocardial ischemia, the high sensitivity and negative predictive value and low false negative rate support the role of thallium stress testing +/- dipyridamole as an exclusion test for significant CAD.
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