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Title: [Two-dimensional exercise echocardiography. Comparison with electrocardiography, myocardial scintigraphy with thallium 201 and coronary angiography]. Author: Gattiker H, Lerch R, Ratib O, Righetti A, Rutishauser W. Journal: Schweiz Med Wochenschr; 1987 Jul 07; 117(27-28):1028-34. PubMed ID: 3616593. Abstract: Biapical two-dimensional echocardiograms were obtained immediately before and after a bicycle exercise test in 54 patients referred for coronary angiography. Images of adequate quality were recorded in 47 cases (87%), 39 of whom had significant coronary artery disease. All patients also underwent a stress electrocardiogram. In 22 subjects echocardiography and bicycle stress test in the supine position were combined. 23 patients underwent scintigraphy with thallium-201. The sensitivity of rest and exercise echocardiography for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease was 90% and the specificity 63%, compared to 82% and 75% respectively for the electrocardiogram. The sensitivity for the detection of jeopardized myocardium, defined by angiographic criteria, was 75% for the exercise echocardiogram and 65% for the exercise electrocardiogram in the 28 patients without myocardial infarction. In 19 patients with infarction echocardiography detected jeopardized myocardium with a sensitivity of 73%, compared to 53% for the electrocardiogram. In the subgroup of 23 patients studied by thallium-201 scintigraphy, sensitivity for identification of multivessel disease (8 patients) was comparable for both rest and exercise scintigraphy (6/8) and echocardiography (7/8). The specificities were 88% and 94% respectively. Jeopardized myocardium was detected in this subgroup with a sensitivity of 82% by echocardiography, 76% by thallium scintigraphy and 65% by electrocardiography. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that two-dimensional echocardiography can be combined with exercise electrocardiography in one stress test. This improves the diagnosis of coronary artery disease, detection of jeopardized myocardium and identification of patients with multivessel disease.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]