Abstract

A lack of the QTc ratio decrease at maximal exercise is considered as an index of exercise-induced ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease. The authors studied 51 patients with recent myocardial infarction in order to evaluate the QTc changes with exercise in assessing the presence of remaining ischemic myocardium. All patients were submitted to exercise stress tests, coronary angiographies, and exercise thallium 201 scintigraphies within 3–5 months of the myocardial infarction. Of the patients studied, 18 showed one-vessel disease and 33 showed multivessel disease. All vessels were classified as patent or occluded. In all patients with reversible thallium 201 defects both at distance and in the infarct zone, the QTc interval following exercise either showed a prolongation or no change from the resting electrocardiogram. In patients with only fixed perfusion defects, the QTc shortened at the end of the test. This study showed a low sensitivity and specificity for inducible ST-segment depression compared with the delayed redistribution on the postexercise thallium 201 scintigram. QTc variations at the end of exercise electrocardiograms are valuable as a noninvasive, low-cost identification of residual ischemic myocardium in patients after myocardial infarction.

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