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Ergonovine maleate test detects anginal patients with poorly reproducible exercise tests
Author(s) -
Brunelli C.,
Spallarossa P.,
Ghigliotti G.,
Lantieri P.,
Iannetti M.,
Caponnetto S.
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
clinical cardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.263
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1932-8737
pISSN - 0160-9289
DOI - 10.1002/clc.4960131006
Subject(s) - ergonovine , medicine , cardiology , angina , heart rate , reproducibility , coronary artery disease , analysis of variance , blood pressure , electrocardiography , mann–whitney u test , vasomotion , statistics , myocardial infarction , mathematics , vasodilation
The aim of the study is to evaluate the reproductability of exercise testing and to determine whether there any correlation between the reproducibility of exercise and response to the ergonovine maleate test. Thirty‐ patients with mixed angina and documented artery disease underwent an ergonovine maleate test four exercise tests on consecutive days in the same conditions. The ergonovine test was positive in 20 patients (Group I) and negative in 18 patients (Group II). There were no significant differences in the clinical and angiographic data of the two groups. All 152 exercise tests were positive. The variability of the response of the repeated tests was assessed by means of an analysis of the following parameters: heart rate, blood pressure, rate‐pressure product, watts, and minutes were recorded at the onset of ischemia (ST| ≥ 0.1 mV). Range (maximal‐minimal obtained value), ratio between range and maximal obtained value, and coefficient of variation (standard deviation/mean of the four parameters) were calculated for each patient. The analysis of these values demonstrated that while the test was reproducible in some patients, a high individual variability was present in others. Moreover, the individual variability results were higher in Group I than in Group II, with a statistically significant difference for all considered parameters. In conclusion, it is possible to have a poorly reproducible exercise test in patients with mixed angina. The correlation between a positive ergonovine test and a poorly reporducible exercise test suggests that abnormal coronary vasomotion may sometimes be present during exercise and may affect the reproducibility of the test.

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