Abstract
Background/Aims: We examined the ischemia-modified albumin (IMA) level during exercise in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). Methods: Forty patients with a history of chest pain underwent both symptom-limited treadmill exercise stress testing and coronary angiography within one week. During the treadmill tests, blood samples were obtained at baseline and 5 min after exercise to measure the serum IMA level. Results: Of the 40 patients, fourteen (35%, CAD group) had significant coronary artery stenosis, while the other 26 (65%, non-CAD group) did not. The baseline and post-exercise IMA levels in the two groups did not differ significantly (105.2±7,2 vs. 107.7±6.7 U/mL at baseline and 93.1±10.1 vs. 94.8±5.7 U/mL at post-exercise in the CAD and non-CAD groups, p=0.29 and 0.57, respectively). The changes in IMA after exercise did not differ either (-10.4±7.5 vs. -14.0±7.6 U/mL in the CAD and non-CAD groups, respectively, p=0.10). Similarly, the change in IMA between the exercise ECG test positive (TMT positive, n=9) and negative (TMT negative, n=20) groups did not differ (-14.63±5.19, vs -8.50±9.01 U/mL, p=0.15, in the TMT positive and negative groups, respectively). Conclusions: Our results suggest that IMA has limitation in detecting myocardial ischemia during symptom-limited exercise stress tests.
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Kim, J. H., Choi, J. H., Lee, H. K., Bae, W. H., Chun, K. J., Kim, Y. S., … Shin, Y. W. (2008). Ischemia-modified albumin (IMA) is not useful for detecting myocardial ischemia during symptom-limited exercise stress tests. Korean Journal of Internal Medicine, 23(3), 121–126. https://doi.org/10.3904/kjim.2008.23.3.121
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