Sakuragi Satoru, Takaki Hiroshi, Taguchi Atsushi, Suyama Kazuhiro, Kurita Takashi, Shimizu Wataru, Kawada Toru, Ishida Yoshio, Ohe Tohru, Sunagawa Kenji
Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, National Cardiovascular Center, Suita, Japan.
Circ J. 2004 Oct;68(10):915-22. doi: 10.1253/circj.68.915.
Using the exercise ECG for diagnosing coronary artery disease (CAD) is hampered by the occurrence of false-positive (FP) ST-segment depression. Because it is known that the recovery ST-T time-course in CAD differs from that in FP subjects, the ST slope may help discriminate FP from true-positive (TP) results.
Treadmill digitized ECG from patients with significant ST-segment depressions and normal resting ECG were analyzed in 134 patients with CAD on angiography (>50% narrowing) and reversible perfusion defects (TP group), and 64 subjects with normal perfusion (FP group) on exercise single photon emission computed tomography. The ST slope between the J-point and J(80) was measured every minute up to 6-min postexercise. The ST slope was significantly higher in FP than in TP at peak exercise, and at postexercise 1-, 2- and 3-min (p<0.01, all). Thereafter, it gradually increased in TP, while monotonically decreasing in FP. Its decrease from 3- to 6-min could correctly diagnose 88% of FP subjects, whereas it was found in only 19% of TP patients (total accuracy 83%).
The ST slope change from early to late recovery is a simple yet reliable marker for discriminating FP from TP ST-segment responses in subjects with a normal resting ECG.