Uses and limitations of high dose dipyridamole stress echocardiography for evaluation of coronary artery disease.
- 1 February 1992
- Vol. 67 (2), 144-149
- https://doi.org/10.1136/hrt.67.2.144
Abstract
OBJECTIVE--To compare the usefulness of high dose dipyridamole stress echocardiography with dipyridamole stress electrocardiography and exercise electrocardiography for the evaluation of coronary artery disease. DESIGN--Prospective investigation with coronary angiography as the criterion standard and blinded assessment of study data. SETTING--Cardiology unit of a tertiary referral centre. SUBJECTS--Fifty eight patients with suspected coronary disease; three of these were excluded because of poor echogenicity at baseline (test feasibility 95%). Angiography showed normal coronary arteries in 15 and coronary disease (greater than or equal to 70% diameter stenosis) in 40. INTERVENTIONS--Cross sectional echocardiography and 12 lead electrocardiography during dipyridamole stress (up to 1 mg/kg) and exercise electrocardiography on a separate occasion. Wall motion was analysed with an 11-segment model developed at Hammersmith Hospital. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--Test sensitivity, specificity, and side effect data. RESULTS--16 of 40 patients with coronary artery disease had inducible asynergy; all had multivessel disease and a tight stenosis in the vessel that supplied the abnormal segment. Exercise duration and time to 1 mm ST segment depression were significantly shorter in patients with a positive echocardiogram than in those without (both p less than 0.01). The sensitivity and specificity of dipyridamole stress echocardiography were 40% and 93% respectively; sensitivity improved to 60% when baseline (n = 18) or reversible asynergy defined an abnormal study (likelihood ratio = 9). Corresponding figures for stress electrocardiography were 38% and 80% for dipyridamole and 80% and 67% for exercise. Adverse reactions were seen in 67% of patients and included two instances of pronounced hypotension, one episode of prolonged myocardial ischaemia, and one cardiac arrest in a patient who was successfully resuscitated. CONCLUSION--A positive high dose dipyridamole echocardiogram predicts multivessel disease and impaired coronary reserve, but low overall sensitivity and occasionally troublesome side effects limit its clinical usefulness.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Update on intravenous dipyridamole cardiac imaging in the assessment of ischemic heart diseaseClinical Cardiology, 1990
- Exercise echocardiographic detection of coronary artery disease in womenJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1989
- Usefulness of oral dipyridamole digital echocardiography for detecting coronary artery diseaseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1989
- Evaluation of coronary artery disease in the patient unable to exercise: Alternatives to exercise stress testingAmerican Heart Journal, 1989
- Dipyridamole cardiac imagingAmerican Heart Journal, 1988
- Comparison of the high-dose dipyridamole-echocardiography test and exercise two-dimensional echocardiography for diagnosis of coronary artery diseaseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1987
- Limitations of dipyridamole-echocardiography in effort angina pectorisThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1987
- Safety of intravenous dipyridamole for stress testing with thallium imagingThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1987
- Ventricular dysrhythmias following intravenous dipyridamole during “stress” myocardial imagingThe British Journal of Radiology, 1983
- Maximal oxygen intake and nomographic assessment of functional aerobic impairment in cardiovascular diseaseAmerican Heart Journal, 1973