BACKGROUND: Myocardial ischemia may play a role in the natural history of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). To assess the relative prevalence and the prognostic value of dipyridamole-induced ischemia, 79 patients with HCM and without concomitant coronary artery disease (53 men; mean age, 46+/-15 years) underwent a high-dose (up to 0.84 mg/kg over 10 minutes) dipyridamole test with 12-lead ECG and two-dimensional echo monitoring and were followed up for a mean of 6 years. METHODS AND RESULTS: Twenty-nine patients (37%) showed ECG (ie, ST depression > or = 2 mV) signs of myocardial ischemia during dipyridamole test (group 1), whereas 50 (63%) had a negative test (group 2). No patient had transient wall motion abnormalities during the dipyridamole test. During the follow-up, 16 events (ie, left ventricular or atrial enlargement, unstable angina, syncope, atrial fibrillation, and bundle-branch block) occurred in 29 patients in group 1 and 5 in 50 patients in group 2 (55% versus 10%, P<.001). Patients with a positive dipyridamole test showed worse 72-month event-free survival rates compared with patients with a negative test (36.2% versus 84.2%, P<.001). A forward stepwise event-free survival analysis identified dipyridamole test positivity by ECG criteria (chi2=19.7, P=.0001), rest gradient (chi2=11.3, P=.0008), and age (chi2=4.1; P=.0413) as independent and additive predictors of subsequent events. CONCLUSIONS: ECG signs of myocardial ischemia elicited by dipyridamole are frequent in patients with HCM and identify patients at higher risk of cardiac events, suggesting a potentially important pathogenetic role of inducible myocardial ischemia in determining adverse cardiac events in these patients.
BACKGROUND:Myocardial ischemia may play a role in the natural history of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). To assess the relative prevalence and the prognostic value of dipyridamole-induced ischemia, 79 patients with HCM and without concomitant coronary artery disease (53 men; mean age, 46+/-15 years) underwent a high-dose (up to 0.84 mg/kg over 10 minutes) dipyridamole test with 12-lead ECG and two-dimensional echo monitoring and were followed up for a mean of 6 years. METHODS AND RESULTS: Twenty-nine patients (37%) showed ECG (ie, ST depression > or = 2 mV) signs of myocardial ischemia during dipyridamole test (group 1), whereas 50 (63%) had a negative test (group 2). No patient had transient wall motion abnormalities during the dipyridamole test. During the follow-up, 16 events (ie, left ventricular or atrial enlargement, unstable angina, syncope, atrial fibrillation, and bundle-branch block) occurred in 29 patients in group 1 and 5 in 50 patients in group 2 (55% versus 10%, P<.001). Patients with a positive dipyridamole test showed worse 72-month event-free survival rates compared with patients with a negative test (36.2% versus 84.2%, P<.001). A forward stepwise event-free survival analysis identified dipyridamole test positivity by ECG criteria (chi2=19.7, P=.0001), rest gradient (chi2=11.3, P=.0008), and age (chi2=4.1; P=.0413) as independent and additive predictors of subsequent events. CONCLUSIONS: ECG signs of myocardial ischemia elicited by dipyridamole are frequent in patients with HCM and identify patients at higher risk of cardiac events, suggesting a potentially important pathogenetic role of inducible myocardial ischemia in determining adverse cardiac events in these patients.
Authors: Paco E Bravo; Iraklis Pozios; Aurélio Pinheiro; Jennifer Merrill; Benjamin M W Tsui; Richard L Wahl; Frank M Bengel; M Roselle Abraham; Theodore P Abraham Journal: Am J Cardiol Date: 2012-06-28 Impact factor: 2.778
Authors: Quirino Ciampi; Iacopo Olivotto; Jesus Peteiro; Maria Grazia D'Alfonso; Fabio Mori; Luigi Tassetti; Alessandra Milazzo; Lorenzo Monserrat; Xusto Fernandez; Attila Pálinkás; Eszter Dalma Pálinkás; Róbert Sepp; Federica Re; Lauro Cortigiani; Milorad Tesic; Ana Djordjevic-Dikic; Branko Beleslin; Mariangela Losi; Grazia Canciello; Sandro Betocchi; Luis Rocha Lopes; Ines Cruz; Carlos Cotrim; Marco A R Torres; Clarissa C A Bellagamba; Caroline M Van De Heyning; Albert Varga; Gergely Ágoston; Bruno Villari; Valentina Lorenzoni; Clara Carpeggiani; Eugenio Picano Journal: J Clin Med Date: 2021-03-24 Impact factor: 4.241