Independent and incremental value of stress echocardiography over clinical and stress electrocardiographic parameters for the prediction of hard…

Jul 30, 2010

 Powered by Max Banner Ads  

Independent and incremental value of stress echocardiography over clinical and stress electrocardiographic parameters for the prediction of hard cardiac events in new-onset suspected angina with no history of coronary artery disease.

Eur J Echocardiogr. 2010 Jul 28;

Authors: Chelliah R, Anantharam B, Burden L, Alhajiri A, Senior R

AIMS: Recent data have shown that exercise electrocardiogram (ECG) has no incremental prognostic value over clinical and rest ECG parameters in chest pain patients without a history of coronary artery disease (CAD). The incremental prognostic value of stress echocardiography (SE) in this population is unknown. METHODS AND RESULTS: Accordingly, 547 consecutive patients (68 +/- 4.9 years) with chest pain but no previous history of CAD, referred for SE (exercise and dobutamine), were identified. Patients were followed up for death and acute myocardial infarction (AMI). At a median follow-up period of 28 months, there were a total of 35 hard cardiac events (5 deaths and 30 non-fatal AMI). Among the prognostic clinical, resting/stress ECG, and SE data, univariate predictors were the Framingham risk score (P = 0.025), diabetes (P = 0.06), hypercholesterolaemia (P = 0.06), stress ECG ischaemia (P = 0.044), stress heart rate (P = 0.019), and SE-determined ischaemic burden (stress-rest wall thickening score index; P < 0.001). In a multivariate model, ischaemic burden was the only independent predictor of events (P < 0.001). SE also showed incremental prognostic value over and above clinical (Framingham's risk score) and stress ECG changes in a global chi(2) model. This was true also for patients undergoing only exercise SE (n = 347). CONCLUSION: SE provides both independent and incremental prognostic value for the prediction of hard cardiac events in chest pain patients without a previous history of CAD-over and above clinical, ECG, and stress ECG data.

20667847

Go here to see the original

Posted by admin | Categories: heart imaging, imaging update |

Share with others

No Responses so far | Have Your Say!

Leave a Feedback

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>


 Powered by Max Banner Ads