About: ST depression is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2203 publications have been published within this topic receiving 53592 citations. The topic is also known as: ST segment depression.
TL;DR: Meta-analysis of reports comparing exercise-induced ST depression with coronary angiography found wide variability in the reported accuracy of the exercise electrocardiogram, not explained by information reported in the medical literature.
Abstract: To evaluate the variability in the reported diagnostic accuracy of the exercise electrocardiogram, we applied meta-analysis to 147 consecutively published reports comparing exercise-induced ST depression with coronary angiography. These reports involved 24,074 patients who underwent both tests. Population characteristics and technical and methodologic factors, including publication year, number of electrocardiographic leads, exercise protocol, use of hyperventilation, definition of an abnormal ST response, exclusion of certain subgroups, and blinding of test interpretation were analyzed. Wide variability in sensitivity and specificity was found (mean sensitivity, 68%; range, 23-100%; SD, 16%; and mean specificity, 77%; range, 17-100%; SD, 17%). The four study characteristics found to be significantly and independently related to sensitivity were the treatment of equivocal test results, comparison with a "better" test such as thallium scintigraphy, exclusion of patients on digitalis, and publication year. The four variables found to be significantly and independently related to specificity were the treatment of upsloping ST depressions, the exclusion of subjects with prior infarction or left bundle branch block, and the use of preexercise hyperventilation. Stepwise linear regression explained less than 35% of the variance in sensitivities and specificities reported in the 147 publications. There is wide variability in the reported accuracy of the exercise electrocardiogram. This variability is not explained by information reported in the medical literature.
TL;DR: Patients with stable angina showed frequent, variable, and often asymptomatic electrocardiographic evidence of ischaemia, suggesting that, in such patients, transient impairment in coronary supply may be at least as important as excessive increase in demand in the genesis ofIschaemia during daily life.
TL;DR: Exercise thallium-201 MPI is a useful adjunct to conventional exercise testing particularly when evaluating patients with abnormal resting ECGs, those who develop ventricular conduction defects or arrhythmias during exercise, and those who fail to achieve their predicted heart rate because of fatigue or breathlessness.
Abstract: The sensitivity of myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) using thallium-201 injected both at rest and during peak exercise was compared to simultaneously recorded 12 lead electrocardiography (ECG) for the detection of transient ischemia in 20 normal subjects and 63 patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). No significant perfusion defects or ECG changes were seen on either the rest or exercise studies in any of the normal subjects. Fifty-six percent of patients with CAD developed new perfusion defects with exercise compared to 38% who developed ischemic ST-segment depression (P less than 0.02). However, when chest pain and/or ST depression were considered indices of ischemia, the sensitivity of exercise testing and thallium-201 MPI was similar. The increased sensitivity of MPI compared to ST-segment depression on the ECG was due to patients with baseline ECG abnormalities and those who failed to achieve 85% of predicted maximum heart rate with exercise. Analysis of the exercise results according to the extent of coronary artery disease revealed a progressive increase in both positive ECGs and MPI with the number of vessels involved. In patients with single vessel disease the MPI was more sensitive than the ECG (P less than 0.02). The combination of the rest and exercise ECG, MPI and chest pain during exercise failed to identify 11% of patients with CAD. Exercise thallium-201 MPI is a useful adjunct to conventional exercise testing particularly when evaluating patients with abnormal resting ECGs, those who develop ventricular conduction defects of arrhythmias during exercise, and those who fail to achieve their predicted heart rate because of fatigue or breathlessness.
TL;DR: Those with chronotropic incompetence had a high incidence of coronary events even though the ECG response to exercise was normal, and a myocardial infarction previous to the test increased the incidence of events in both positive and negative responders.
Abstract: Follow-up data on 2700 subjects who had had maximum stress tests were assembled in life tables. A positive test, characterized by ST-segment depression of 1.5 mm, 0.08 sec from the J point, predicted an incidence of some new coronary event of 9.5% a year, as compared with 1.7% in those with a negative test. The incidence of infarction and death was also significantly higher than in the negative responders. Early onset of ischemia occurring at moderate exercise (4 metabolic equivalents-METS) resulted in an incidence of all coronary events of 15% a year, while ischemia first manifested at the seventh minute of exercise (approximately 8 METS) results in an incidence of only 4% per year. The magnitude of ST depression and the age of onset of ischemia failed to influence the incidence of coronary events. A myocardial infarction previous to the test increased the incidence of events in both positive and negative responders. The positives with a previous infarction had more than double the incidence of coronary events than the positive responders with no pre-existing infarction. Those with chronotropic incompetence had a high incidence of coronary events even though the ECG response to exercise was normal.
TL;DR: It is concluded that attention to configuration, time of onset, and duration of ischemic ST depression aids both in assessing the validity of exercise responses in diagnosing coronary artery disease and in delineating patients with advanced coronary obstruction.
Abstract: The configuration, time of onset, and duration of depressed ST segments during and after treadmill exercise testing were evaluated in 269 patients with angiographically proven coronary artery disease and 141 normal subjects. The test specificity was 93% and sensitivity 64%, the latter being influenced by the type of ST response; false-positive responses were rare with depressed, downsloping STs (1 of 123, 1%), occurred more frequently with horizontal ST depression (9 of 60, 15%), and occurred commonly with slowly upsloping STs (15 of 47, 32%). Depressed downsloping STs, ischemic changes appearing in the first 3 minutes of exercise, and those persisting past 8 minutes in recovery were associated with 91%, 86%, and 90% prevalences of two- to three-vessel or main left coronary disease, respectively. It is concluded that attention to configuration, time of onset, and duration of ischemic ST depression aids both in assessing the validity of exercise responses in diagnosing coronary artery disease and in delineating patients with advanced coronary obstruction.