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Detecting abnormalities in left ventricular function during exercise before angina and ST-segment depression.

TLDR
During exercise in patients with coronary artery disease, abnormalities in left ventricular function frequently develop before angina pectoris and electrocardiographic evidence of myocardial ischemia.
Abstract
To determine if abnormalities in left ventricular function precede angina pectoris and electrocardiographic evidence of myocardial ischemia, we used radionuclide angiocardiography to measure left ventricular ejection fraction, volumes, cardiac output and wall motion in 10 normal subjects and 25 patients with coronary artery disease at rest and during two levels of upright bicylce exercise. In the patients with coronary artery disease, the first radionuclide study during exercise was performed before and the second after the onset of ST-segment depression. In all normal subjects, the ejection fraction increased more than 5%, the end-diastolic volume increased less than 25% and the end-systolic volume decreased from rest to both levels of exercise. Wall motion was normal at rest and increased with exercise. No patient with coronary artery disease had chest pain or ST-segment depression during the first level of exercise. The ejection fraction either decreased or increased less than 5% in 18 patients, the end-diastolic volume increased more than 25% in nine, the end-systolic volume increased in 19 and a segmental contraction abnormality developed in 14. Hemodynamic and wall motion abnormalities occurred in all patients during the second level of exercise when ST-segment depression was present. During exercise in patients with coronary artery disease, abnormalities in left ventricular function frequently develop before angina pectoris and electrocardiographic evidence of myocardial ischemia.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Echocardiographic detection of coronary artery disease during dobutamine infusion.

TL;DR: Echocardiography combined with dobutamine infusion is a safe and accurate method for detecting coronary artery disease and for predicting the extent of disease in those who have localized rest wall motion abnormalities.
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Effect of Age on the Response of the Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction to Exercise

TL;DR: In the older subjects these age-related changes in ejection fraction during exercise were not associated with differences in end-diastolic volume or blood pressure, and wall-motion abnormalities during exercise occurred with increasing frequency in patients who were 50 and older.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accuracy of diagnosis of coronary artery disease by radionuclide management of left ventricular function during rest and exercise.

TL;DR: The high degree of sensitivity of the radionuclide test suggests that it is most appropriately applied to patient groups with a high prevalence of disease, including those considered for cardiac catheterization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic resonance imaging during dobutamine stress for detection and localization of coronary artery disease. Quantitative wall motion analysis using a modification of the centerline method.

TL;DR: Dobutamine MRI is an accurate method for detection and localization of myocardial ischemia and may emerge as a new noninvasive approach for evaluation of patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exercise-induced myocardial ischaemia detected by cardiopulmonary exercise testing

TL;DR: The addition of gas exchange analysis improves the diagnostic accuracy of standard ECG stress testing in identifying EIMI, and a two-variable model based on O(2)pulse flattening duration and deltaVO(2)/deltawork rate slope had the highest predictive ability to identify EIMi.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of coronary occlusion on myocardial contraction

TL;DR: Desc descriptions of a technique and of a type of optical myograph suitable for such studies and an analysis of the changes in optical myograms which follow clamping of a large coronary vessel are concerned.
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“Variant” angina: One aspect of a continuous spectrum of vasospastic myocardial ischemia: Pathogenetic Mechanisms, Estimated Incidence and Clinical and Coronary Arteriographic Findings in 138 Patients

TL;DR: Angiography in all 37 patients studied during angina revealed a severe coronary vasospasm involving vessels with extremely variable extent of atherosclerosis, which may evolve into acute myocardial infarction and sudden death.
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Regional Myocardial Function during Acute Coronary Artery Occlusion and Its Modification by Pharmacologic Agents in the Dog

TL;DR: The results indicate the power of this approach, which provides continuous quantification of regional wall function in myocardial ischemia and during therapeutic interventions, and suggests a protective effect of this drug.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cardiac function at rest and during exercise in normals and in patients with coronary heart disease: evaluation by radionuclide angiocardiography.

TL;DR: Patients with ischemic myocardial disease respond to the stress of exercise by cardiac dilatation to maintain or increase stroke volume at increased heart rates, and the magnitude of this response appears to be greatest in patients with left main coronary artery stenosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Graded Exercise Stress Tests in Angiographically Documented Coronary Artery Disease

TL;DR: It is concluded that recent digitalis ingestion should not be considered a contraindication for exercise stress testing and the angiographic severity of coronary artery disease correlates strongly with the frequency of positive tests.
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