OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to compare exercise, dipyridamole and dobutamine echocardiography in the same patients and to evaluate, by measuring physiologic and echocardiographic variables, the mechanisms by which exercise and dobutamine induce ischemia. BACKGROUND: The diagnostic value of stress echocardiography has been widely reported, but the specific effects of exercise, dipyridamole and dobutamine have not been directly compared. Furthermore, no echocardiography study has evaluated left ventricular volume changes at ischemic threshold during exercise and dobutamine administration. METHODS: One hundred patients with suspected (Group A, n = 60) or known (Group B, n = 40) coronary artery disease underwent all three tests in random order. RESULTS: In Group A, the sensitivities of exercise (mean 76%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 58% to 94%) and of dobutamine echocardiography (72%, 95% CI 53% to 91%) were higher than that of dipyridamole (52%, 95% CI 31% to 73%; p = 0.01 and p = 0.02, respectively). Specificity did not differ significantly among tests (94% for exercise [95% CI 86% to 100%] and 97% for dipyridamole and dobutamine [95% CI 91% to 100%]). Accuracy was identical for exercise and dobutamine (87%) and higher than that for dipyridamole (78%, p = 0.06). In Group B, the accuracy in predicting coronary disease extent was 71% for exercise, 33% for dipyridamole and 75% for dobutamine. At ischemic threshold, end-systolic volume index and the ratio of systolic blood pressure to end-systolic volume, a variable related to myocardial contractility, were significantly lower and higher, respectively, with dobutamine than during exercise (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: In a clinical setting, exercise echocardiography should represent the first diagnostic approach because it has high diagnostic efficacy and provides additional information on exercise capacity; pharmacologic stress, particularly that of dobutamine, provides a pivotal diagnostic tool when exercise is not feasible or its results are nondiagnostic. Our preliminary data on echocardiographic evaluation at ischemic threshold support the view that myocardial contractility is a major factor in inducing ischemia during dobutamine infusion.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to compare exercise, dipyridamole and dobutamine echocardiography in the same patients and to evaluate, by measuring physiologic and echocardiographic variables, the mechanisms by which exercise and dobutamine induce ischemia. BACKGROUND: The diagnostic value of stress echocardiography has been widely reported, but the specific effects of exercise, dipyridamole and dobutamine have not been directly compared. Furthermore, no echocardiography study has evaluated left ventricular volume changes at ischemic threshold during exercise and dobutamine administration. METHODS: One hundred patients with suspected (Group A, n = 60) or known (Group B, n = 40) coronary artery disease underwent all three tests in random order. RESULTS: In Group A, the sensitivities of exercise (mean 76%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 58% to 94%) and of dobutamine echocardiography (72%, 95% CI 53% to 91%) were higher than that of dipyridamole (52%, 95% CI 31% to 73%; p = 0.01 and p = 0.02, respectively). Specificity did not differ significantly among tests (94% for exercise [95% CI 86% to 100%] and 97% for dipyridamole and dobutamine [95% CI 91% to 100%]). Accuracy was identical for exercise and dobutamine (87%) and higher than that for dipyridamole (78%, p = 0.06). In Group B, the accuracy in predicting coronary disease extent was 71% for exercise, 33% for dipyridamole and 75% for dobutamine. At ischemic threshold, end-systolic volume index and the ratio of systolic blood pressure to end-systolic volume, a variable related to myocardial contractility, were significantly lower and higher, respectively, with dobutamine than during exercise (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: In a clinical setting, exercise echocardiography should represent the first diagnostic approach because it has high diagnostic efficacy and provides additional information on exercise capacity; pharmacologic stress, particularly that of dobutamine, provides a pivotal diagnostic tool when exercise is not feasible or its results are nondiagnostic. Our preliminary data on echocardiographic evaluation at ischemic threshold support the view that myocardial contractility is a major factor in inducing ischemia during dobutamine infusion.
Authors: D Benchimol; M Mazanof; B Dubroca; H Benchimol; V Bernard; T Couffinhal; J F Dartigues; R Roudaut; X Pillois; J Bonnet Journal: Clin Cardiol Date: 2000-11 Impact factor: 2.882
Authors: Danielle Menosi Gualandro; Pai Ching Yu; Bruno Caramelli; André Coelho Marques; Daniela Calderaro; Luciana Savoy Fornari; Claudio Pinho; Alina Coutinho Rodrigues Feitosa; Carisi Anne Polanczyk; Carlos Eduardo Rochitte; Carlos Jardim; Carolina L Z Vieira; Debora Y M Nakamura; Denise Iezzi; Dirk Schreen; Eduardo Leal Adam; Elbio Antonio D'Amico; Emerson Q de Lima; Emmanuel de Almeida Burdmann; Enrique Indalecio Pachón Mateo; Fabiana Goulart Marcondes Braga; Fabio S Machado; Flavio J de Paula; Gabriel Assis Lopes do Carmo; Gilson Soares Feitosa-Filho; Gustavo Faibischew Prado; Heno Ferreira Lopes; João R C Fernandes; José J G de Lima; Luciana Sacilotto; Luciano Ferreira Drager; Luciano Janussi Vacanti; Luis Eduardo Paim Rohde; Luis F L Prada; Luis Henrique Wolff Gowdak; Marcelo Luiz Campos Vieira; Maristela Camargo Monachini; Milena Frota Macatrão-Costa; Milena Ribeiro Paixão; Mucio Tavares de Oliveira; Patricia Cury; Paula R Villaça; Pedro Silvio Farsky; Rinaldo F Siciliano; Roberto Henrique Heinisch; Rogerio Souza; Sandra F M Gualandro; Tarso Augusto Duenhas Accorsi; Wilson Mathias Journal: Arq Bras Cardiol Date: 2017 Jan-Feb Impact factor: 2.000