Routine Exercise Testing to Detect Coronary Artery Disease in Patients with Atherosclerotic Vascular Disease

Autor: F. J. J. Van Der Watt, A. M. Travers, P. J. Jordan, C. J. C. Nel
Rok vydání: 1990
Předmět:
Zdroj: Annals of Vascular Surgery. 4:479-484
ISSN: 0890-5096
DOI: 10.1016/s0890-5096(07)60074-0
Popis: The ability of patients with peripheral vascular disease to perform exercise studies on a conventional treadmill is often hampered by claudication, amputation, ischemic ulceration or rest pain. This study was undertaken to investigate the use of the arm ergometer in these patients. Eighty-three patients admitted with peripheral vascular or carotid artery disease were subjected to electrocardiographic-monitored exercise testing, using both the arm ergometer and conventional treadmill, where possible. Coronary arteriography was performed consecutively on 32 of these patients to establish a control group from which the sensitivity, specificity and predictive accuracy of both methods of exercise testing could be calculated. Nineteen of the 70 arm ergometry tests and 22 of the 48 treadmill tests were positive. Nineteen of the patients with a positive test using either of the methods were asymptomatic for cardiac disease. All five patients who developed cardiac events during surgery had positive exercise tests, preoperatively. The sensitivity of arm ergometry in detecting coronary artery disease was 45.5% and the specificity 100%, while the figures for treadmill testing were 82.4% and 83.3%, respectively. The combined sensitivity for the two tests was 81.8% and the specificity 87.5%. Using a combination of these two tests thus provided a highly specific and adequately sensitive means of detecting the presence of coronary artery disease in patients presenting for peripheral vascular surgery.
Databáze: OpenAIRE