Karam Paul MS, MD, MBA, FACC Community Heart and Vascular.

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TO STRESS OR NOT TO STRESS ? Karam Paul MS, MD, MBA, FACC Community Heart and Vascular

Transcript of Karam Paul MS, MD, MBA, FACC Community Heart and Vascular.

Page 1: Karam Paul MS, MD, MBA, FACC Community Heart and Vascular.

TO STRESS OR NOT TO STRESS ?

Karam Paul MS, MD, MBA, FACCCommunity Heart and Vascular

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Cardiac stress testing - learning objectives

►Know why to undertake a stress test ►Know who should have one ►Know how it is performed ►Understand the limitations ►Understand which to choose ►Know what to do with the result

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Cardiac stress testing

Why do a stress test?

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Aims of stress testing

►Elicit abnormalities not present at rest

►Estimate functional capacity

►Estimate prognosis

►Likelihood of coronary artery disease ►Extent of coronary artery disease

►Effect of treatment

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Cardiac stress testing

Who should have one?

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Diagnostic test

►Bayes’ Theorem

►Consider the ‘pre-test risk’

►Sensitivity & specificity of the test

►Post-test probability of CAD ►Diagnostic power of EST is maximal when the pre-test probability is intermediate.

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Risk assessment

►Pre-existing coronary artery disease

►Diabetes

►Hypertension

►Smoking history

►Family history ►Renal disease

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Consider other risk factors

Pre-existing coronary artery disease ►Diabetes ►Hypertension ►Hyperlipidemia ►Smoking history ►Family history ►Renal disease

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Consider other risk factors

►Pre-existing coronary artery disease

►Diabetes ►Hypertension ►Hyperlipidemia ►Smoking history ►Family history ►Renal disease

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Valvular heart disease

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Rhythm disorders

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Contraindications

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Cardiac Stress Testing

How is it done?

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Exercise protocol

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Positive!

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Measurements

►ECG

►Exercise capacity (METS – metabolic equivalent)

►Symptoms

►Blood pressure

►Heart rate response & recovery

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ECG

1mm planar ST depression

3 consecutive beats

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► The normal and rapid upsloping ST segment responses are normal responses to exercise. ► Minor ST depression can occur occasionally at submaximal workloads in patients with coronary disease. ► The slow upsloping ST segment pattern often demonstrates an ischemic response in patients with known coronary disease or those with a high pretest clinical risk of coronary disease. ► Downsloping ST segment depression represents a severe ischemic response. ► ST segment elevation in an infarct territory (Q wave lead) indicates a severe wall motion abnormality and, in most cases, is not considered an ischemic response.

(From Chaitman BR: Exercise electrocardiographic stress testing. In Beller GA [ed]: Chronic Ischemic Heart Disease. In Braunwald E [series ed]: Atlas of Heart Diseases. Vol 5. Chronic Ischemic Heart Disease. Philadelphia, Current Medicine, 1995, pp 2.1-2.30

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T wave changes

► Influenced by: Body position Respiration Hyperventilation Drug Rx Myocardial ischemia Necrosis

► Pseudonormalisation: Usually non-diagnostic Consider ancillary imaging

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METs

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Heart rate response

►Peak HR > 85% of maximal predicted for age

►HR recovery >12 bpm (erect)

►HR recovery >18 bpm (supine)

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Heart rate response

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Prognostic value of stress testing

Parameters associated with adverse prognosis or multi-vessel disease

► Duration of symptom-limiting exercise <5 METs ► Failure to increase sBP ≥120mmHg, or a sustained decreased ≥ 10mmHg, or below rest levels, during progressive exercise ► ST segment depression ≥2mm, downsloping ST segment, starting at <5 METs, involving ≥5 leads, persisting ≥5 min into recovery ► Exercise-induced ST segment elevation (aVR excluded) ► Angina pectoris at low exercise workloads ► Reproducible sustained (>30 sec) or symptomatic ventricular tachycardia

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Limitations of treadmill stress test

► Non-diagnostic ECG changes ► False positives/false negatives ► Women – false positives ► Elderly – more sensitive/less specific ► Diabetics – autonomic dysfunction ► Hypertension ► Inability to exercise ► Drugs – digoxin; anti-anginals

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Non-coronary causes of ST segment depression

► Anemia ► Cardiomyopathy ► Digoxin ► Glucose load ► Hyperventilation ► Hypokalemia ► Intraventricular conduction disturbance ► Mitral valve prolapse ► Pre-excitation syndrome ► Severe aortic stenosis ► Severe hypertension ► Severe hypoxia ► Severe volume overload (aortic or mitral regurgitation) ► Sudden excessive exercise ► Supraventricular tachycardia's

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Limitations of treadmill stress test

Sensitivity 68% Specificity 77%

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Ancillary techniques to enhance content

Echocardiography Radionuclide imaging

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Stress echocardiography

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Stress echocardiography

Compares pre & post: Regional contractility Overall systolic function Volumes Pressure gradients Filling pressures Pulmonary pressures Valvular function

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Dobutamine stress echo

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Stress echo - limitations

Factors which effect image quality:

Body habitus Lung disease Breast implants

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Normal stress echocardiogram

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Case 1

►54 year old bank project manager ►Exertional chest pain & dyspnea ►Ex-smoker ►TC = 6.7mmol/L ►Stress ECG – 2mm ST segment depression in 5 leads

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Stress echocardiogram

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Coronary angiogram

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Case 2

►62 year old female

►Chest pain & dyspnea

►Treadmill exercise test – non-diagnostic sub-maximal Hypertension No ECG changes

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Case 2

►Exercised 7½ minutes (9.4 METS)

►No chest pain

►ECG changes

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Case 2

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Case 2

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Case 3

►24 year old female engineer ►Exertional dyspnea

►Palpitations

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Case 3

Inducible dyspnea ►ECG partial right bundle branch block no ischemic changes

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Case 3

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Case 3

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Case 3

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Case 4

►43 year old male - airline catering ►Chest pain

►Dyspnea

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Case 4

►Inducible dyspnea ►Non-specific T wave changes ►No ST segment shift ►Global deterioration in left ventricular function

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Case 4

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Case 4

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Case 4

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Nuclear SPECT imaging ►Radio-tracer injection ►Isotopes: Thallium-201 Technetium 99m (sestamibi)

►Myocardial uptake ►Photon emission captured by gamma camera ►Rest & redistribution phases ►Pharmacologic protocols available ►Digital presentation

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Nuclear SPECT imaging

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Nuclear SPECT imaging

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Nuclear SPECT imaging

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Nuclear SPECT imaging

Reversible inferior wall defect

Milder reversible inferior wall defect

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Limitations of nuclear SPECT imaging

►Time-consuming

►Artifacts ►Balanced ischemia ►Radiation

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Limitations of nuclear SPECT imaging

Normal apical thinning.

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Limitations of nuclear SPECT imaging

A. Breast attenuation B. Anterior ischemia

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Limitations of nuclear SPECT imaging

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Limitations of nuclear SPECT imaging

►Risk of iatrogenic malignancy

►Linear no-threshold model ►Consider: age gender background

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Limitations of nuclear SPECT imaging

Einstein, A. J. et al. Circulation 2007;116:1290-1305

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MRI cardiac stress test

Useful for: ►Patients unable to exercise ►ECG uninterpretable ►Unsuitable for DSE

And…. ►No radiation

But… ►Not currently available

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Question

►45 year old diabetic man

►Anterior chest discomfort with exertion ►Exercised for 2 mins 30 secs (4.6 METs) ►95% maximal predicted heart rate

►Mild chest pain

►BP increased from baseline to 180/80mmHg

►1mm ST depression in leads II, III, aVF, V4-6

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Which is true?

1. Pre-test risk is intermediate 2. Post-test probability for cardiac events is high 3. The ECG changes are non-diagnostic 4. The ECG changes are false-positive in the setting of hypertension 5. Chest pain is not a useful symptom in diabetics

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Answer

1. Pre-test risk is intermediate 2. Post-test probability for cardiac events is high 3. The ECG changes are non-diagnostic 4. The ECG changes are false-positive in the setting of hypertension 5. Chest pain is not a useful symptom in diabetics

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Remember…

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Remember…

Parameters associated with adverse prognosis or multi-vessel disease

► Duration of symptom-limiting exercise <5 METs ► Failure to increase sBP ≥120mmHg, or a sustained decreased ≥ 10mmHg, or below rest levels, during progressive exercise ► ST segment depression ≥2mm, downsloping ST segment, starting at <5 METs, involving ≥5 leads, persisting ≥5 min into recovery ► Exercise-induced ST segment elevation (aVR excluded) ► Angina pectoris at low exercise workloads ► Reproducible sustained (>30 sec) or symptomatic ventricular tachycardia

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When ordering a stress test consider…

►Pre-test risk of disease

►Sensitivity & specificity of the test

►Value of supplementary data

►AND JUST ONE MORE TIP……..

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MRI cardiac stress test

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Cardiac stress testing

So….which one to choose?

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What to do with the result?

►Remember Bayes’ theorem

►Consider the pre-test risk

►Be aware of the sensitivity & specificity of the test

►Apply the post test probability

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CT Calcium score

►Correlates with presence & extent of CAD ►Strong negative predictive value

►Cannot predict functional significance

►Higher scores can predict events

►Recommended for asymptomatic with intermediate risk

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CT Calcium score

Calcification of the left anterior descending coronary artery (large arrow) and left circumflex coronary artery (small arrow).

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CT Calcium score

Score description RR 0 nil 1 – 99 mild 1.9 100 – 399 moderate 4.3 400 – 999 severe 7.2 >1000 extensive 10.8

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CT Calcium score

► Indicated – asymptomatic with intermediate risk

► Not for low risk/population screening ► High risk – use current guidelines

► Do not reduce Rx if intermediate risk & ‘0’ score

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CT coronary angiography

►2-dimensional & 3-dimensional reconstructions

►Relies on slow, regular heart rate

►High negative predictive value (‘rule out’ ability)

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CT coronary angiography - limitations

►Lower positive predictive value (over-estimation tendency)

►Grading of stenosis limited

►Does not evaluate functional significance

►Radiation exposure

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CT coronary angiography

►Role not yet clearly defined

►Potential for those with intermediate likelihood of disease: Where stress testing not possible Stress test equivocal/uninterpretable Acute chest pain/no ECG changes/normal enzymes

►Role in anomalous anatomy

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CT coronary angiography