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    Ann Intern Med. 1981 Jun;94(6):727-34.

    Limited exercise testing soon after myocardial infarction. Correlation with early coronary and left ventricular angiography.

    Schwartz KM, Turner JD, Sheffield LT, Roitman DI, Kansal S, Papapietro SE, Mantle JA, Rackley CE, Russell RO Jr, Rogers WJ.

    Forty-eight patients within 3 weeks of myocardial infarction underwent both limited treadmill graded exercise testing and coronary and left ventricular angiography. Nineteen (90%) of 21 patients with positive exercise tests (greater than or equal to 1 mm ST depression, angina, or both) had multivessel coronary artery disease. In the 27 patients with negative exercise test results, 15 (55%) had multivessel disease, 11 (41%) had single-vessel disease, and one (4%) had no coronary stenosis. Exercise-induced ST segment elevation occurred in 24 patients and predicted a significantly lower ejection fraction and higher angiographic abnormally contracting segment size. Patients experiencing angina during or after exercise had a significantly shorter 2-year survival (54% +/- 21%) than patients without exercise-induced angina (97% +/- 3%) (p less than 0.03). Thus limited exercise testing postinfarction is useful in evaluating the presence of multivessel coronary artery disease and left ventricular dysfunction and predicting long-term survival.

    PMID: 7235412 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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