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Dr R.V.S.N. Sarma., M.D., M.Sc., Consultant Physician and Chest Specialist To my beloved mother Asymptomatic NSTEMI Chronic Stable Angina (CSA) Unstable Angina (USA) STEMI / Re MI SCD / CVM • • • • • • • • • • Slowly progressive CAD CSA to USA to NSTEMI to STEMI and CVM Warning ++ long duration Collateral CBF good ECG / TMT evidence + CAG will confirm CAD Prognosis is good; Older Non vulnerable plaques Flow limiting narrowing Form only 30 % of MI cases • • • • • • • • • • • Group with sudden MACE Give no time to act SCD or Massive MI No previous CSA or USA No warning; Short duration No time for collateral CBF TMT/ CAG -ve before MACE Prognosis is poor; Younger Vulnerable ruptured plaques Focus on factors causing rupture Contribute to 70% of MI cases Suresh • • • • • • • 24 years BMI 20 No CP No DM Lipids N Smoking 0 ECG N Low 2% Lakshmi • • • • • • • 54 years BMI 25 Atypical CP T2 DM 5 yrs LDL 150 Smoking 0 ECG T L3 Intermediate 39 % Devadoss • • • • • • • 43 years BMI 28 Atypical CP IGT + LDL, TG Ex Smoker ECG N Intermediate 46% Masthan • • • • • • • 64 years BMI 30 Angina + DM for 25 y LDL HDL Smoker 25 y ST-T Abnor High 98% 1. Routine Treadmill (ECG only) – ETT or TMT 2. Stress Echocardiography Dobutamine Echocardiography (CSE) Exercise Stress Echocardiography (ESE) 3. Nuclear Imaging – Chemical Stress - MPI Dobutamine Nuclear Stress Adenosine Nuclear Stress Persantine Nuclear Stress • Exercise testing is a well-established procedure • It is in widespread clinical use for many decades • The “how-to” is beyond the scope of this talk • Although ETT is generally a safe procedure, both MI and death have been reported • Occur at a rate of up to 1 per 2500 tests (0.04%) Atypical and typical Chest pain CV risk profile Unstable Angina – Decision on need for CAG Risk stratification after MI and assess CABG To prescribe exercise in CAD / Athletes/ PVD Asymptomatic pt without CV Risk factors ?? Perfect Lead contact – shaving the chest area in men Should be supervised by a well trained physician, who should be available immediately for emergencies Careful monitoring & recording in each stage of exercise The electrocardiogram (ECG) Heart rate Blood pressure And during ST-segment abnormalities and chest pain. The patient should be monitored continuously Bicycle Ergo meter Treadmill Test • Cycle Ergo meters are generally – – – – Less expensive and smaller Less noisy than treadmills ECG disturbances are minimum But, produce less motion of the upper part of body – The fatigue of the quadriceps muscles is a major limitation • Treadmills are much more commonly used • Supine stress testing is not routinely used • • • • • • Age Gender Angina H/o previous MI Q waves in ECG Resting ST-T changes • Diabetes • Dyslipidemia • Smoking • Diagnostic Test utility • Most in intermediate probability • Least in high or low probability • Typical Angina • Sub-sternal location • Provoked by exertion or emotion • Relieved by rest/GTN Age Gender Typical/Definite Angina Pectoris 30-39 30-39 Males Intermediate Intermediate low (<10%) Very low (<5%) Females Intermediate Very Low (<5%) Very low Very low 40-49 Males High (>90%) Intermediate Intermediate low 40-49 Females Intermediate Low Very low Very low 50-59 Males High (>90%) Intermediate Intermediate Low 50-59 Females Intermediate Intermediate Low Very low 60-69 Males High Intermediate Intermediate Low 60-69 Females High Intermediate Intermediate Low High = >75% Atypical/Probable Non-Anginal Angina Pectoris Chest Pain Intermediate = 15-75% Low = <15% Asymptomatic Very Low = < 5% Clinical Presentation CV Risk Factors Derive Pretest Probability Use a computer model or Use the probability table Low (<15%) No Testing Intermediate 15% to 75% Stress Testing High ( >75%) Angiography Intermediate Probability 15% - 75% Assess ECG and Exercise Tolerance Normal ECG Can exercise Treadmill test Duke score Negative No more testing Positive Abnormal ECG or Can’t exercise MPI or ESE or CSE Angiography Absolute • Acute myocardial infarction (within 2 days) • High-risk unstable angina • Uncontrolled cardiac arrhythmias • Symptomatic severe aortic stenosis • Uncontrolled symptomatic heart failure • Acute pulmonary embolus or pulmonary infarction • Acute myocarditis or pericarditis • Acute aortic dissection Relative Left main coronary stenosis Moderate stenotic valvular heart disease Electrolyte abnormalities Severe arterial hypertension Tachy or Brady arrhythmias HOCM and other outflow obstructions Mental or physical impairment High-degree atrio-ventricular block Absolute indications • Drop in SBP of >10 mm Hg from baseline BP with accompanying evidence of ischemia • Moderate to severe angina • Increasing nervous system symptoms ataxia, dizziness • Signs of poor perfusion (cyanosis or pallor) • Technical difficulties in monitoring ECG or SBP • Subject’s desire to stop; Sustained ventricular tachycardia Relative indications • Drop in SBP of ≥10 mm Hg BP without ischemia • ST or QRS changes - ST depression (>2 mm of horizontal or down sloping ST-segment ↓) or axis shift • Arrhythmias VT, multifocal PVCs, triplets of PVCs, SVT, • Heart block or brady arrhythmias, BBB or IVCD • Fatigue, shortness of breath, wheezing, leg cramps, IC • Increasing chest pain; Hypertensive response > 250/115 • Only Manual SBP measurement for safety • Adjust to clinical history (couch potatoes) • Age predicted Heart Rate Targets ? ? • The BORG Scale of Perceived Exertion • METs - not ‘Minutes’ have to be used • Use standard ECG analysis + 3 minute recovery • Use scores, ST/HR Index, Heart rate recovery Electrocardiographic Hemodynamic Symptomatic Max ST and ST Max ETT Heart Rate Exercise Angina ST sloping down, up or Max ETT - SBP Exercise limiting Sympt. No. of leads showing ST change Max ETT Double product Time to onset of angina ST duration into recovery Exercise hypotension Exercise up to stage IV ST/HR Index, Time to onset Exercise in METs, minutes ETT induced ventricular arrhythmia Chronotropic failure 6 7 Very, very light 8 9 Very light 10 11 Fairly light 12 13 Somewhat hard 14 15 Hard 16 17 Very hard 18 19 20 Very, very hard o Metabolic Equivalent Term o 1 MET = "Basal" aerobic oxygen consumption to stay alive = 3.5 ml O2 /Kg/min -70 kg, 40 yr man o Actually differs with thyroid status, post exercise, obesity, disease states o By convention just divide ml O2/Kg/min by 3.5 METs = Speed x [0.1 + (Grade x 1.8)] + 3.5 3.5 • Total of 1+6 (Seven 3 minute stages) – (3+18 min) • Each minute exercise is approximately 1 MET • Pretest plain walking + 6 Stages of graded exercise • In each stage there is increase in speed and gradient • Initial 1.7 mph with 10% gradient (upward inclination) • Maximum 5.5 mph with 20% gradient Bruce stage Speed and Gradient Minutes METs Stage 1 1.7 mph + 10% Gradient 3 5 Stage 2 2.4 mph + 12% Gradient 6 7 Stage 3 3.1 mph + 14% Gradient 9 10 Stage 4 3.8 mph + 16% Gradient 12 13 Stage 5 4.6 mph + 18% Gradient 15 17 Stage 6 5.5 mph + 20% Gradient 18 20 o 1 MET = "Basal" = 3.5 ml O2 /Kg/min o 2 METs = o 4 METs = o < 5METs = o10 METs = 2 mph on level 4 mph on level Poor prognosis if < 65 years Medical Rx as good as CABG o 13 METs = Excellent prognosis o 16 METs = Aerobic master athlete o 20 METs = Super athlete • Lead V5 alone consistently outperforms other leads • False + ves are high with the inferior leads • Without prior MI and with normal resting ECGs, the precordial leads alone are a reliable marker for CAD. • Exercise-induced ST-segment only in inferior leads is not significant for CAD. • Down sloping or horizontal ST-segment is a stronger predictor of CAD but not up sloping ST J point depression of 2 to 3 mm in leads V4 to V6 with rapid up sloping ST segments depressed approximately 1 mm 80 m sec after the J point. This response should not be considered abnormal. In lead V4 , the exercise ECG result is abnormal early in the test, reaching 0.3 mV (3 mm) of horizontal ST segment depression at the end of exercise. Consistent with a severe ischemic response. This “slow up sloping” ST segment at peak exercise indicates an ischemic pattern with a high coronary disease prevalence pretest. A typical ischemic pattern is seen at 3 minutes of the recovery phase when the ST segment is horizontal and 5 minutes after exertion when the ST segment is down sloping. This is typical ischemic response • Early repolarization is a common resting pattern of ST in normal persons. • Exercise-induced ST-segment is always considered from the baseline ST level. • ST is seen after a Q-wave infarction, but ST in leads without Q waves occurs in only 1 of 1000 (0.1%) patients of ETT. • ST is very arrhythmogenic and localizes the IHD • MACE : Sudden Cardiac Death (SCD), AMI and USA • Ruptures of high-risk or vulnerable plaques • Inner plaque material is exposed to blood and initiates formation of a platelet-fibrin thrombus on the rupture. • The rupture may seal without detectable sequelae or • The patient may experience ACS or SCD. • Majority of the vulnerable plaques appear insignificant on the CAG ,before rupture (less than 75% stenosis) • Majority of the stenosis > 75% have no vulnerable LV Functional Damage Severity of CAD Modifiable factors H/o Prior MI, ECG Path Qs Anatomic - SVD, DVD, TVD DM, HT, Dyslipidemia CHF, Cardiomegaly in CXR Degree of stenosis and extent Excess weight, Smoking EF (<40%) and ESV Transient IHD on Holter Other co-morbidities LV -RWMA on Echocardio ETT induced ST deviations Other Metabolic factors Conduction disturbances Progressive symptoms of IHD Ventricular arrhythmias MR, Exercise tolerance Increasing age Systolic Blood Pressure x HR = Double Product Example: SBP 170 x HR 160 = 27, 200 Double product must be at least: 20, 000 SBP should rise > 40 mmHg Diastolic BP may decline by 10 mm Drop of > 10 mm in SBP is ominous (Exertional Hypotension) • Age Predicted Maximum HR (PrMHR) = (220 – Age in years) • Example: For a 55 years pt Pr MHR = (220-55) = 165 • THR = 90% of Pr MHR of 165 = 148 • Chronotropic Incompetence = < 85% of Pr MHR • In this case 85% of 165 (Pr MHR) = < 140 BPM • Chronotropic Index (CI)= of less than 0.8 is very significant • (HRpeak – HR rest)÷ (PrMHR –HRrest) • If this pt achieved HRpeak of 130 from HRrest of 90 • CI = (130 – 90) ÷ (165 – 90) = 40 ÷ 75 = 0.53 is very low Abnormal • If the HR is not reduced by at least 22 BPM from peak exercise heart rate to heart rate measured after 2 minutes. • It is strongly predictive of all-cause mortality. • Duke score = Exercise time – 5 × (ST-segment deviation in mm) – 4 × Exercise Angina Index (EAI) • Exercise time is based on a standard Bruce protocol • ST deviation is < 1 mm, is taken as 0. • ST deviation = Max exercise ST – Base line ST • E A I value: 0 if no exercise angina 1 if exercise angina occurred 2 if angina severe enough to stop • High-risk group: The Duke score of –11 13% of patients fall in this group. Average annual CV mortality 5%. • Intermediate risk : The Duke score of + 4 to – 10 53% of all patients fall in this group Annual CV mortality 0.5% to 4% • Low-risk group: The Duke score of + 5 34% of patients fall in this group. Average annual CV mortality < This nomogram applies to patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease, without prior revascularization or recent myocardial infarction, who undergo exercise testing before coronary angiography. Variable Maximal Heart Rate Circle response Points Less than 100 bpm = 30 100 to 129 bpm = 24 130 to 159 bpm =18 160 to 189 bpm =12 190 to 220 bpm =06 Exercise ST Depression 1-2mm =15 > 2mm =25 Age Angina History >55 yrs =20 40 to 55 yrs = 12 <40: Low probability Definite/Typical = 5 40-60: Intermediate probability >60: High probability Probable/atypical =3 Non-cardiac pain =1 Hypercholesterolemia? Yes=5 Diabetes? Yes=5 Exercise test induced Angina Choose only one per group Occurred =3 Reason for stopping =5 Total Score Variable Maximal Heart Rate Points Circle response Less than 100 bpm = 20 100 to 129 bpm = 16 130 to 159 bpm =12 160 to 189 bpm =08 190 to 220 bpm =04 Exercise ST Depression 1-2mm =06 > 2mm =10 Age >65 yrs =25 Choose only one per group 50 to 65 yrs = 15 Angina History Definite/Typical = 10 Probable/atypical =6 Non-cardiac pain =2 Estrogen status Positive = -5; Negative = +5 Diabetes? Yes =10 Smoking? Yes =10 Exercise Induced Angina Occurred =9 Reason for stopping =15 Total Score <37: Low probability 37-57: Intermediate probability >57: High probability 954 patients - clinical/TMT reports Sent to 44 expert cardiologists, 40 cardiologists and 30 MD physicians Scores did always better than all three The experts were the nearest to scores SCORE = (1=yes, 0=no) METs<5 + Age>65 + History of CHF + History of MI or Q wave a=0, b=1, c=2, d=more than 2 Digoxin Abnormal ST depression (45%) LVH Decreases the specificity of ETT Resting ST depression Marker of MACE LBBB ST depression has limited value RBBB No effect; V3-V6 to be monitored Beta blockers Decrease the Heart Rate response Calcium Channel Block Decreased Chronotropic response ETT Result Low risk Intermediate High risk Co morbidity + CAD Prob Average Mortality 40% 1% per year 40 to 60% 2 – 3 % per year 60% 4% per year Any prob. Any level risk Recommend Medical Rx. Imaging/CAG CAG soon Medical Rx. GOLD STANDARD CAD by CAG No CAD by CAG SnNOUT (Minimum FN) Sensitivity is True positives TMT + VE TEST True Positives False Positives a b Total CAD a a+c Specificity is TMT – VE False Negative True Negatives c d True Negatives Total No CAD Total CAD a+c Total No CAD b+d d b+d SpPIN (Minimum FP) GOLD STANDARD CAD by CAG TMT + VE No CAD by CAG TEST True Positives False Positives 60 60 SnNOUT (Rules out 60%) Sensitivity is True positives 60 Total CAD 100 Specificity is TMT – VE False Negative True Negatives 40 240 Total CAD 100 Total No CAD 300 True Negatives 240 Total No CAD 300 SpPIN (Confirms 80%) SnNout • Gianrossi R, Detrano R, Mulvihill D, et al. Exercise-induced ST depression in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease. Circulation 1989; 80:87-98. • Meta-analysis of 147 consecutive studies involving 24,074 patients SpPin 78 76 74 72 70 68 66 64 62 SENSITIVITY SPECIFICITY 100 90 80 70 60 Stress ECG Stress ECHO Nuclear 50 40 30 20 10 0 1 vessel 2 vessel 3 vessel All CAD • • • • Sensitivity of ETT is as low as 30 % v/s 62% in men Stress imaging is not the first alternative in women Just as in men Exercise ECG testing is the first test Multiple CV risk factors, Severe long standing DM, PVD, CKD are indications for ETT • Routinely in asymptomatic men/women without any CV Risk factors – ETT is not indicated • The false positive ETT results - unwanted tests and treatments preclude the use of ETT as a routine test. • Risk stratification and assessment of prognosis • Functional capacity for activity level after discharge • Assessment of adequacy of medical therapy • To decide on diagnostic or treatment options. • ETT after MI is safe but after 2 to 3 weeks • Fatal Re MI and cardiac rupture – 0.03% • Non fatal Re MI with recovery – 0.09% • Complex arrhythmias, including VT, is – 1.4% • The two types of patients – Implications for testing • Sensitivity (SnNout) : 62%; Specificity (SpPin) : 78% • Pretest probability : If intermediate ETT is very useful • METs < 5; 5-10; >10, > 13 ; Bruce protocol minutes • Max SBP at least 40 mm more; THR – 90% of MHR • Drop in SBP ominous, Chronotropic Incompetence • Double product : Max SBP x Max attained HR www.cardiology.org for all the calculators http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic2961.htm http://www.aafp.org/afp/990115ap/401.html http://www.acc.org/clinical/guidelines/exercise http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/118/2/81 http://www.webmd.com/heart-disease/exerciseelectrocardiogram http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/96/1/345#T1 http://www.mssm.edu/medicine/generalmedicine/ebm/CPR/CAD.html