The Prognosis of an Abnormal Electrocardiographic Stress Test
- 1 March 1970
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 41 (3) , 545-553
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.41.3.545
Abstract
Treadmill walking for 10 min at 3 mph against a 5% grade has been used as an electrocardiographic (ECG) stress test as part of a prospective epidemiologic study of 2,437 men. From 1953 through 1966, 22,223 tests have been done without untoward event. The criteria of an abnormal postexercise ECG were ischemic flattening or coving of the S-T segment, T-wave changes consistent with focal left ventricular epicardial ischemia, and paroxysmal left bundle-branch block. Of the 2,003 men exercised two or more times, 264 developed some manifestation of ischemic heart disease (IHD) and in 75 (30%) this was an abnormal ECG response to exercise. They had higher blood pressures and were more often heavy smokers than normal responders. Body weight and serum cholesterol were similar in the two groups. Over the next 5 years there was an 85% probability that these abnormal responders would develop angina pectoris or experience a myocardial infarction. These relatively insensitive but highly specific and reproducible ECG criteria accurately identify men with clinically silent but far-advanced coronary atherosclerosis, attested by the poor prognosis of an abnormal response. An abnormal postexercise ECG is valid evidence of IHD. A submaximal ECG stress test is useful in clinical and epidemiologic studies and might be useful in assessing the effectiveness of efforts to reduce the risk of IHD.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Postexercise Electrocardiogram in Arteriosclerotic Heart DiseaseJAMA, 1967
- Use of the electrocardiogram in exercise testsAmerican Heart Journal, 1963
- The postexercise electrocardiogram∗The American Journal of Cardiology, 1962
- Two step exercise test as a test of cardiac function in chronic rheumatic heart disease and in arteriosclerotic heart disease with old myocardial infarctionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1961
- Characteristics of True-Positive and False-Positive Results of Electrocardiographs Master Two-Step Exercise TestsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1958
- The electrocardiographic exercise test: Changes in the scalar ecg and in the mean spatial QRS and T vectors in two types of exercise; Effect of absolute and relative body weight and comment on normal standardsAmerican Heart Journal, 1956
- THE ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHIC DIAGNOSIS OF ACUTE MYOCARDIAL ISCHEMIAAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1955
- Cardiovascular Health CenterAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1954
- The electrocardiographic exercise testAmerican Heart Journal, 1952
- THE TWO-STEP EXERCISE ELECTROCARDIOGRAM: A TEST FOR CORONARY INSUFFICIENCYAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1950