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Stress testing Stress tests Performed on patients with

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Title: Stress testing Stress tests Performed on patients with


1
Stress testing
2
Stress tests
  • Performed on patients with intermediate pretest
    probability of coronary artery disease.
  • In patients with low pre-test probability, a
    stress tests does not help to further clarify
    diagnosis or prognosis.
  • In patients with very high pre-test probability
    of CAD, a cardiac catheterization provides
    definitive information about coronary anatomy and
    the opportunity for intervention.
  • Provides diagnosis but more importantly prognosis.

3
Bayesian Theory
4
Source of stress
  • Exercise
  • Pharmacologic
  • Adenosine
  • Dobutamine
  • Pharmacologic stress tests will be addressed in
    another lecture.

5
Detection of Ischemia
  • EKG
  • Nuclear perfusion imaging
  • Echocardiography
  • Later two methods will be addressed in another
    lecture.

6
Exercise
  • Prefer method of stress
  • Reproduce symptoms in real-life context.
  • The amount of exercise one can perform provides a
    lot of prognostic information.
  • Bruce, modified Bruce (3 minutes of easy time
    Bruce), Naughton/Gervino protocols.
  • Usually, ask the patient to exercise close to
    their maximal effort. Would like them to reach
    85 MPHR or RPP gt20,000. Stop if there are very
    high risk features (hemodynamic compromise,
    signs/symptoms of severe ischemia, serious
    arrythmias)

7
Fitness strong predictor of survival
  • 6213 men referred for exercise testing who were
    followed for a mean of 6.2 years., M, Froelicher,
    V, et al, N Engl J Med 2002 346793
  • In both subject with and without cardiovascular
    disease, exercise capacity strongly predicts
    survival (in fact, more than the presence or
    absence of CVD).
  • For each one MET increase in exercise capacity
    there was a 12 percent improvement in survival.

8
Why not always exercise the patient?
  • Often, patients cannot exercise to the workload
    necessary for a diagnostic test due to arthritis,
    PVD, poor functional statusetc.
  • Sometimes useful to assess just how poor is the
    functional status.
  • Exercise stress test is contraindicated
  • Within 2 days of myocardial infarction or high
    risk unstable angina (known ST depressionetc).
  • Decompensated heart failure, acute PE, known or
    suspected dissecting aneurysm.
  • Severe stenotic valvular disease relatively
    contraindicated.

9
Hemodynamic response
  • With exercise, both the blood pressure and heart
    rate goes up.
  • Failure to increase the SBP gt120, sustained
    decrease gt10mmHg or decrease in BP below standing
    value during exercise is a high risk feature
  • Usually reflects LMCA, 3vd, or severe AS where
    cardiac output declines with stress

10
Hemodynamic response
  • For diagnosis of CAD, would like the patient to
    reach 85 of maximal predicted heart rate or rate
    pressure product of gt20,000
  • Maximal predicted HR (220-age)
  • Rate pressure product (BP x HR)
  • Should medicines (beta-blockersetc.) be withheld
    prior to the test?
  • For the diagnosis of CAD, yes
  • For the assessment of the efficacy of medical
    mngt, no need to withhold drugs.

11
EKG response
  • ST depression (0.8ms after the J point- usually
    read on 3 consecutive beats)
  • Shape (upsloping, flat, down-sloping)
  • Amount
  • Positive test considered 1mm horizontal or
    down-sloping depression in 2 neighboring leads.
  • Location does not localize ischemia.
  • ST elevation-
  • In leads with prior q waves, not a concern
  • In leads with no q waves- ACS, sent to cath lab,
    location predicts ischemia. Uncommon- 1

12
EKG response
  • Can also develop arrythmias-
  • VT can develops in setting of ischemia.
  • Supraventricular tachycardia
  • Heart block in the case of infranodal conduction
    disease.
  • The heart rhythm abnormalities can sometimes
    explain the patients symptoms.

13
Diagnosis and prognosis
  • Sensitivity and specificity in patients selected
    for angiography is 68 and 77, respectively
  • referral bias exaggerate false positives,
    eliminates false negatives (falsely improves
    sensitivity and worsens specificity)
  • Duke Treadmill score
  • Exercise time- (5x ST deviation)- 4x treadmill
    angina index)
  • Angina index- 0 none, 1 typical angina, 2
    angina reason patient stopped exercising.

14
Duke Treadmill Score
  • Low risk- gt5
  • Intermediate- 4 to -10
  • High risk- lt-11
  • The five year survival was
  • 65 percent in high risk patients
  • 90 percent in moderate risk patients
  • over 97 percent in low risk patients
  • A study with 70 men
  • Shaw, LJ, Peterson, ED, Shaw, LK, et al.
    Circulation 1998 981622

15
Some limitations of EKG
  • Uninterpretable in the setting of LBBB or IVCD.
  • Accuracy goes down in the setting of LVH or
    otherwise abnormal resting EKG.
  • Less accurate in women compared to men (more
    false positives)

16
Potential complications
  • In general, exercise stress test is a very safe
    test.
  • 1 cardiac arrest per 565,000 person/hour of
    exercise, about 10 fold higher in the population
    with CAD (still very low).

17
How to interpret a stress test?
  • Look for
  • Duration of exercise
  • High risk hemodynamic features- fall in blood
    pressureetc
  • Symptoms
  • Heart rate and blood pressure response (HR 85
    MPHR and RPP gt20000)
  • EKG results- presence of ischemic changes, ectopy
  • Can calculate Duke treadmill score

18
Case 1
  • 53 year old man with hyperlipidemia was referred
    to an exercise stress test for chest pain. He
    exercised 13 minutes of the Bruce protocol,
    developing mild chest pain at minute 11, EKG
    shows 1mm ST horizontal ST depression that
    resolved 5 minutes after recovery. What do you
    think of is his
  • Diagnosis?
  • Prognosis?

19
Case 2
  • 74 year old woman with diabetes, hypertension,
    and hyperlipidemia who exercised for 2 minutes of
    the Bruce protocol and developed severe, crushing
    chest pain. EKG monitoring shows 4mm downsloping
    ST depression and intermittent NVST. What is her
  • Diagnosis?
  • Prognosis?
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