Literature DB >> 34505312

Predicting premature termination of exercise during Bruce protocol stress echocardiography.

Julian Loh1, Mohammed Rizwan Amanullah1, Chai Keat See1, Hak Chiaw Tang1, Kurugulasigamoney Gunasegaran1, Nadira Hamid1, Jeffrey Lau1, Chung Yin Lee1, See Hooi Ewe1, Zee Pin Ding1, Anders Sahlén1,2.   

Abstract

AIMS: Clinical guidelines recommend that the exercise protocol of a stress echocardiogram is selected to induce volitional exhaustion after a target duration of at least 8 minutes. While the Bruce protocol is very commonly used for clinical stress tests, it is known to be "steep", and many patients therefore fail to reach 8 minutes. We studied predictors of failure and developed a method for identifying patients not suitable for Bruce protocol which was accurate and yet simple enough to be used as a point-of-care decision support tool. METHODS AND
RESULTS: We studied data out-patients undergoing Bruce protocol stress echocardiograms (n = 11 086) and analyzed predictors of inappropriate early termination (defined as test duration < 8 min as per current practice guidelines) using logistic regression. A prediction model was constructed as follows: .5 points were given for each of hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and E/e' > 7.9 in the resting echocardiogram; .1 point was added for each 1-unit increment in body mass index; 1 point was added for patient age by decade; 2.0 points were subtracted for male sex (p for all < 0.001). In tests on held-out validation data, the model was well calibrated (in plots of predicted vs actual risk) and discriminated failure versus non-failure well (C-statistic .86 for a score of 6.0 points; p < 0.001).
CONCLUSION: These data may help to standardize protocol selection in stress echocardiography, by identifying patients pre-hoc where Bruce protocol will be inappropriately steep.
© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  echocardiography; exercise; exercise test

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34505312     DOI: 10.1111/echo.15186

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Echocardiography        ISSN: 0742-2822            Impact factor:   1.724


  1 in total

1.  Effectiveness of App-Based Intervention to Improve Health Status of Sedentary Middle-Aged Males and Females.

Authors:  María Martínez-Olcina; Bernardo José Cuestas-Calero; Laura Miralles-Amorós; Manuel Vicente-Martínez; Javier Sánchez-Sánchez
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-05-11       Impact factor: 4.614

  1 in total

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