Abstract
Certain patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) may have neither ST depression nor chest pain during exercise despite the presence of myocardial ischemia. The frequency and characteristics of such electrocardiographically and symptomatically silent ischemia were studied in 171 patients with both angiographically documented CAD and scintigraphically documented ischemia. Fifty-six (33%) of 171 patients had neither ST depression nor chest pain (Group N), and 115 (67%) had ST depression and/or chest pain (Group P). The two groups were similar with respect to age, gender, the prevalence of prior infarction, and peak systolic blood pressure. Group N patients, however, had a higher mean peak heart rate and rate-pressure product, less severe scintigraphic ischemia, a lower lung thallium-201 uptake, and a smaller number of diseased vessels. Stepwise discriminant analysis showed a history of effort angina, lung thallium-201 uptake, and scintigraphic severity of ischemia to be significant discriminators between Groups N and P. In conclusion, electrocardiographically and symptomatically silent ischemia may be common during exercise in patients with CAD, and less severe ischemia may be one of important determinants. © 1991, The Japanese Circulation Society. All rights reserved.
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Kurata, C., Tawarahara, K., Sakata, K., Taguchi, T., Fukumoto, Y., Kobayashi, A., … Tanaka, H. (1991). Electrocardiographically and symptomatically silent myocardial ischemia during exercise testing. JAPANESE CIRCULATION JOURNAL, 55(9), 825–834. https://doi.org/10.1253/jcj.55.825
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