Abstract

Patients with left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy often have a positive result on exercise testing despite a normal coronary arteriogram. This indicates that exercise-induced ST depression is not always an accurate indicator of the presence of coronary artery disease (CAD) in such patients. We evaluated the usefulness of the postexercise systolic blood pressure (BP) response for detection of CAD in 51 patients with both electrocardiographic evidence of LV hypertrophy and positive ST depression on treadmill exercise testing. Coronary cineangiograms showed normal coronary arteries in 23 patients (45%) (group 1) and significant CAD in 28 patients (55%) (group 2). The systolic BP ratio (systolic BP at 3 minutes of recovery divided by systolic BP at peak exercise) was significantly higher in group 2 than in group 1 (1.01 ± 0.19 vs 0.80 ± 0.09; p < 0.001). Analysis of the relative cumulative frequency revealed that a systolic BP ratio of 0.86 was the cutoff point for distinguishing a patient with CAD from one with normal coronary arteries. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of a systolic BP ratio ≥0.86 for detection of CAD in patients with LV hypertrophy were 79%, 83%, and 82%, respectively. Our results suggest that the use of an abnormal BP ratio, in combination with ST depression, improves the accuracy of treadmill exercise testing for detecting CAD in patients with electrocardiographic evidence of LV hypertrophy.

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