Radionuclide ventriculography and hemodynamic evaluation by right heart catheterization with exercise for assessing the functional significance of coronary artery stenoses. A comparative study
- PMID: 3626425
- DOI: 10.1007/BF01727625
Radionuclide ventriculography and hemodynamic evaluation by right heart catheterization with exercise for assessing the functional significance of coronary artery stenoses. A comparative study
Abstract
A series of 13 patients with significant coronary stenoses but without prior myocardial infarction were simultaneously studied by right heart catheterization and radionuclide ventriculography to determine the extent to which abnormal responses in left ventricular ejection fraction and wall motion to maximum exercise are paralleled by abnormal left ventricular filling pressures. The correlations of the filling pressure as evaluated by the diastolic pulmonary artery pressure with both the exercise ejection fraction and the rest-to-exercise change in ejection fraction were high (r = -0.89, P less than 0.01 and r = -0.76, P less than 0.01, respectively). In addition, the filling-pressure response to stress separated the patients into distinct radionuclide categories. All the 7 patients with grossly abnormal filling pressures (P greater than or equal to 30 mmHg) developed regional wall motion abnormalities with exercise as evaluated by visual interpretation or quantitative phase analysis. These patients also had a decrease in ejection fraction from rest to exercise ranging from -9% to -32% together with an exercise ejection fraction below 50%. Conversely, these abnormalities were never found in patients with filling pressures below this threshold level. The data suggest that radionuclide ventriculography and measurement of left ventricular filling pressure with exercise yield corresponding results when assessing the functional significance of coronary stenoses in normotensive patients without prior myocardial infarction and normal global left ventricular function at rest.