Abstract

The significance of hypotension developing during treadmill exercise testing was evaluated and correlated with the findings at cardiac catherization in two groups of patients. Twenty-five patients (Group I) had a fall in systolic pressure during exercise and were compared to 50 consecutive unselected patients (Group II) with a normal blood pressure response. Clinical characteristics were similar in both groups. Females comprised 48 per cent of the patients in Group I and only 30 per cent in Group II. The incidence of significant coronary artery disease was not different when the two groups were compared as a whole, 56 per cent in Group I and 36 per cent in Group II (P = NS). When males and females were considered separately, it was noted that the incidence of coronary artery disease was higher in hypotensive males (77 per cent) when compared to control males (40 per cent) (p < 0.01). Females in both groups had a lower but comparable incidence of coronary artery disease (25 per cent and 27 per cent, respectively). Resting hemodynamics and angiographic characteristics, such as contraction abnormalities, and the number and distribution of diseased coronary vessels, were similar in both groups of patients. These findings suggest that hypotension in females does not necessarily connote coronary artery disease. Males with hypotension have a higher incidence of coronary artery disease, but the extent and distribution of their disease is no different from that of patients with a normal blood pressure response to exercise.

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