Abstract

To enhance diagnostic accuracy in coronary artery disease, cardiac cinefluoroscopy for the detection of coronary artery calcification was combined with exercise test and ambulatory ST-segment monitoring in 104 symptomatic patients before they underwent coronary angiography. In 44 patients with typical angina the combination of the three noninvasive tests and the exercise test alone both detected 92% of subjects with clinically important coronary artery disease. In 60 patients with atypical angina, the combination of the three noninvasive tests screened 77% of the subjects with clinically important coronary artery disease versus 43% after exercise test only ( P < 0.001). The exercise electrocardiogram was false negative in a substantial number of patients with atypical angina due to the presence of a good coronary reserve or to a daily circadian variation in the tone of the coronary arteries. Under these circumstances, cardiac cinefluoroscopy gave additional anatomic information to the physiological assessment of ischemia provided by the exercise test and ambulatory ST-segment monitoring. Our study suggests that the combination of cardiac cinefluoroscopy with other noninvasive tests may be particularly useful in screening atypically symptomatic populations.

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