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Title: Prevalence and functional significance of transient ST-segment depression during daily life activity: comparisons of ambulatory ECG with stress redistribution thallium 201 single-photon emission computed tomographic imaging. Author: Klein J, Rodrigues EA, Berman DS, Prigent F, Chao SY, Maryon T, Rozanski A. Journal: Am Heart J; 1993 May; 125(5 Pt 1):1247-57. PubMed ID: 8480575. Abstract: To assess the prevalence and functional significance of ischemic ambulatory ECG responses, we prospectively performed ambulatory ECG monitoring in 244 patients (mean age 61 +/- 10 years) referred for stress redistribution thallium 201 myocardial perfusion scintigraphy. The prevalence of ST-segment depression during ambulatory ECG was 33% among patients with a positive exercise ECG, but prevalence varied in selected patient subgroups. Among three groups with coronary artery disease (CAD), the group with ambulatory ECG ischemia (group 1) had a greater frequency of ischemic thallium responses (p = 0.07), a greater median number of reversible thallium defects (p < 0.05), and a greater summed thallium "reversibility" score (p < 0.05) than did the group with a positive exercise ECG but negative ambulatory ECG response (group 2) or that with negative exercise and ambulatory ECG responses (group 3). Exercise ST depression in group 1 versus group 2 was significantly greater (p = 0.002), occurred at a lower heart rate threshold (p = 0.002), and lasted longer after exercise (p = 0.001). Notably, one third of group 1 patients also manifested evidence of transient ischemic dilation of the left ventricle after exercise (p < 0.01 vs groups 2 and 3), a sign of severe ischemia. However, although functionally less "sick" than group 1 patients, 66% of group 2 patients and 50% of group 3 patients still had an ischemic thallium response, which was sometimes severe. Thus transient ischemia during ambulatory ECG monitoring identifies a functionally sicker cohort of patients with CAD and occurs in approximately one third of CAD patients with positive results of exercise tests. A negative ambulatory ECG response, however, does not exclude functionally significant disease among CAD patients. These results imply that caution should be applied in the interpretation of a negative ambulatory ECG response for the purpose of patient risk stratification.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]