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Can J Cardiol ; 13(4): 363-9, 1997 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9141968

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To correlate angiocardiographic and electrocardiographic (ECG) measures of risk in coronary artery disease (CAD) patients. SETTING: Baseline substudy of the Simvastatin/Enalapril Coronary Atherosclerosis Trial (SCAT), a 2 x 2 factorial, randomized, controlled trial of CAD regression. PATIENTS: One hundred and twenty-three CAD patients, 113 males and 10 females; average age, 59 years. METHODS: Bivariate correlations of multiple quantitative measures of epicardial coronary angiographic luminal narrowing (quantitative coronary angiography [QCA]) and body surface ECG maps of the sum of the decrease in the potential time integral of the ST segment (SST decrease) between rest and symptom-limited exercise and between rest and 1 and 5 mins postexercise recovery. RESULTS: The average number of epicardial coronary segments analyzed per patient was 12. The mean diameter averaged 2.78 mm; the minimal diameter, 2.01 mm. The mean percentage coronary stenosis averaged 29.6% and the most severe averaged 62.9%. sigma ST decrease averaged -5323 microV.s between rest and peak exercise and recovered slowly, averaging -5117 microV.s at 1 min postexercise and -4562 microV.s at 5 mins. No QCA measure correlated with any ECG variable (range of r, 0.002 to -0.179; not significant). CONCLUSIONS: Among CAD patients there are no close, or causal, relations between angiographic measures of anatomic epicardial coronary atherosclerosis and ECG functional measures of exercise-induced myocardial ischemia. These data suggest that demonstrated values of stress ECG and coronary angiography for the prediction of clinical risk in CAD patients are largely independent of each other.


Subject(s)
Coronary Angiography , Coronary Artery Disease/diagnostic imaging , Coronary Artery Disease/physiopathology , Electrocardiography , Exercise , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Risk
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