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Circulation. 2006;114:2070-2082
doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.561944
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(Circulation. 2006;114:2070-2082.)
© 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.


Contemporary Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine

Exercise Electrocardiogram Testing

Beyond the ST Segment

Paul Kligfield, MD; Michael S. Lauer, MD

From the Division of Cardiology, Weill Medical College of Cornell University and the Cornell Center of the New York–Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY (P.K.); and the Departments of Cardiovascular Medicine, Quantitative Health Sciences, and Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio (M.S.L.).

Reprint requests to Michael S. Lauer, MD, Desk JJ40, Cleveland Clinic, 9500 Euclid Ave, Cleveland, OH 44195. E-mail lauerm@ccf.org


Key Words: electrocardiography • exercise • heart rate • physiology • prognosis


An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract.
 


*    Introduction
 
Exercise testing remains the most widely accessible and relatively inexpensive method for initial evaluation of suspected coronary disease and for evaluation of its severity.1–3 Clinical usefulness has been limited, however, by poor sensitivity of standard ST-segment depression criteria for assessment of anatomic and functional coronary disease severity and for prediction of risk.1,2,4–6 Recent data make it clear that symptomatic obstructive plaques that typically result in exercise-mediated ischemia may be less relevant to infarction and sudden death than less obstructive unstable plaques.7 These limitations mandate a rethinking of the exercise ECG along 2 distinct lines: First, is it possible to improve the diagnostic value of the exercise ECG? Second, separate from its ability to diagnose obstructive coronary artery lesions, can the exercise test be used as a prognostic tool that can encourage effective prevention of premature deaths or coronary events? Both goals take us beyond the ST segment.


*    Beyond the ST Segment: What Are We Looking for?
 
Reversible ST-segment depression is the characteristic finding associated with exercise-induced, demand-driven ischemia in patients with significant coronary obstruction but no flow limitation at rest. This process differs from the flow-limited acute coronary syndromes because exercise-related ischemia is generally limited to the subendocardium and is proportional to increases in myocardial oxygen demand. Ventricular waveforms of the ECG can be related to the net uncanceled transmural gradients between endocardial and epicardial myocardium, as extrapolated from the work of Holland and Brooks, among others.8–10 Accordingly, isoelectric TQ and ST segments in normal and in nonischemic patients can be related to comparable resting membrane and action potential . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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