STUDY OBJECTIVES: To compare the usefulness of dipyridamole echocardiography, dobutamine-atropine echocardiography, and exercise stress testing in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease and to analyze the agreement among the tests. DESIGN: Performance of these three tests in random order on a consecutive cohort of patients. SETTING: A tertiary care and university center. PATIENTS: One hundred two consecutive patients with chest pain and no history of coronary artery disease. INTERVENTIONS:Dipyridamole echocardiography, dobutamine-atropine echocardiography, exercise stress testing, and coronary angiography. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS:Dobutamine-atropine test was positive in 49 (77%) of 63 patients with coronary artery disease, dipyridamole test in 49 (77%), and exercise stress test in 44 (68%; p = NS). Both echocardiographic tests showed an overall specificity (dipyridamole, 97%; dobutamine, 95%) higher than exercise stress test (79%; p < 0.05). Sensitivity of dipyridamole testing decreased from 93 to 61% (p = 0.002) if patients were receiving antianginal treatment but sensitivity of dobutamine-atropine testing was not affected (77% in patients receiving and not receiving treatment). When results were considered as positive-negative, agreement between dipyridamole and dobutamine-atropine echocardiography was 85% (kappa = 0.70). With regards to regional analysis, concordance was good (93% for segments, kappa = 0.76; and 95% for coronary arteries, kappa = 0.92). Major complications were more frequent during dobutamine-atropine (n = 7) than during dipyridamole infusion (n = 2) (p = 0.06). CONCLUSIONS:Dobutamine-atropine and dipyridamole echocardiography have a similar sensitivity and a higher specificity than that obtained by exercise ECG for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease. Similar information is obtained with dipyridamole and dobutamine-atropine echocardiography. It is our thought that pharmacologic stress echocardiography should be used as a first-step test to rule out coronary artery disease in patients not capable of exercising.
RCT Entities:
STUDY OBJECTIVES: To compare the usefulness of dipyridamole echocardiography, dobutamine-atropine echocardiography, and exercise stress testing in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease and to analyze the agreement among the tests. DESIGN: Performance of these three tests in random order on a consecutive cohort of patients. SETTING: A tertiary care and university center. PATIENTS: One hundred two consecutive patients with chest pain and no history of coronary artery disease. INTERVENTIONS:Dipyridamole echocardiography, dobutamine-atropine echocardiography, exercise stress testing, and coronary angiography. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS:Dobutamine-atropine test was positive in 49 (77%) of 63 patients with coronary artery disease, dipyridamole test in 49 (77%), and exercise stress test in 44 (68%; p = NS). Both echocardiographic tests showed an overall specificity (dipyridamole, 97%; dobutamine, 95%) higher than exercise stress test (79%; p < 0.05). Sensitivity of dipyridamole testing decreased from 93 to 61% (p = 0.002) if patients were receiving antianginal treatment but sensitivity of dobutamine-atropine testing was not affected (77% in patients receiving and not receiving treatment). When results were considered as positive-negative, agreement between dipyridamole and dobutamine-atropine echocardiography was 85% (kappa = 0.70). With regards to regional analysis, concordance was good (93% for segments, kappa = 0.76; and 95% for coronary arteries, kappa = 0.92). Major complications were more frequent during dobutamine-atropine (n = 7) than during dipyridamole infusion (n = 2) (p = 0.06). CONCLUSIONS:Dobutamine-atropine and dipyridamole echocardiography have a similar sensitivity and a higher specificity than that obtained by exercise ECG for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease. Similar information is obtained with dipyridamole and dobutamine-atropine echocardiography. It is our thought that pharmacologic stress echocardiography should be used as a first-step test to rule out coronary artery disease in patients not capable of exercising.
Authors: Yoshinori Noguchi; Shizuko Nagata-Kobayashi; James E Stahl; John B Wong Journal: Int J Cardiovasc Imaging Date: 2005 Apr-Jun Impact factor: 2.357
Authors: J A San Román; I Vilacosta; J A Castillo; M J Rollán; M Hernández; V Peral; I Garcimartín; M M de la Torre; F Fernández-Avilés Journal: Heart Date: 1998-10 Impact factor: 5.994