Abstract

Twenty-four patients with a history of effort angina, a positive exercise stress test (EST) and coronary artery disease were enrolled in the study; 12 patients had a positive dipyridamole-echocardiography test (DET) and 12 had a negative DET. Each patient performed a total of 4 ESTs in the absence of therapy on two successive days; for each test the rate-pressure product (RPP), an established index of myocardial oxygen demand, was measured at the onset of ischaemia (ST depression greater than 0.15 mV) or at the peak of maximal exercise (if a repeated EST was negative). Taking into account the lowest of the 4 RPP values (X 1/100) in each patient, there was no significant difference between DET-negatives and DET-positives (185.2 +/- 49.3 vs 157.4 +/- 32.4). Conversely, when considering the highest of the 4 RPP values in each patient, there was a significant difference between DET-negatives and DET-positives (280.3 +/- 63.9 vs 183.3 +/- 37.0; p less than 0.01). Thus, DET may provide a clinically useful tool for assessing in the individual the organic 'ceiling' of coronary reserve, by eliminating the variability in coronary tone, which may affect EST reproducibility and the correct evaluation of the impairment of organic coronary reserve.

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