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Transthoracic Coronary Flow Data at Rest Predict High-Risk Stress Tests. / Zagatina, Angela; Zhuravskaya, Nadezhda; Vareldzhyan, Yuliya; Kamenskikh, Maxim; Shmatov, Dmitry; Benacka, Jozef; Kucera, Martin; Kruzliak, Peter.

In: Acta Radiologica, Vol. 59, No. 6, 01.06.2018, p. 664-671.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Zagatina, A, Zhuravskaya, N, Vareldzhyan, Y, Kamenskikh, M, Shmatov, D, Benacka, J, Kucera, M & Kruzliak, P 2018, 'Transthoracic Coronary Flow Data at Rest Predict High-Risk Stress Tests', Acta Radiologica, vol. 59, no. 6, pp. 664-671. https://doi.org/10.1177/0284185117733143

APA

Zagatina, A., Zhuravskaya, N., Vareldzhyan, Y., Kamenskikh, M., Shmatov, D., Benacka, J., Kucera, M., & Kruzliak, P. (2018). Transthoracic Coronary Flow Data at Rest Predict High-Risk Stress Tests. Acta Radiologica, 59(6), 664-671. https://doi.org/10.1177/0284185117733143

Vancouver

Author

Zagatina, Angela ; Zhuravskaya, Nadezhda ; Vareldzhyan, Yuliya ; Kamenskikh, Maxim ; Shmatov, Dmitry ; Benacka, Jozef ; Kucera, Martin ; Kruzliak, Peter. / Transthoracic Coronary Flow Data at Rest Predict High-Risk Stress Tests. In: Acta Radiologica. 2018 ; Vol. 59, No. 6. pp. 664-671.

BibTeX

@article{7557aaa2bf5843019a2ef584a3b4ee01,
title = "Transthoracic Coronary Flow Data at Rest Predict High-Risk Stress Tests",
abstract = "Background: Several recent studies have reported the opportunity to diagnose significant narrowing of the coronary arteries without stress testing using local flow acceleration. Purpose: To define how often patients with increased coronary flow velocities at rest (≥ 0.70 m/s) have a positive exercise echocardiography test. Material and Methods: A total of 150 patients scheduled for exercise echocardiography were studied using transthoracic Doppler echocardiography in order to assess coronary artery flow velocity before exercise. Pulsed wave Doppler registered blood flow velocity placed on the color signal. The maximal diastolic velocity of coronary flow was measured. Results: Of participants, 16% had a velocity of more than 0.70 m/s in the left main/proximal left anterior/proximal left circumflex arteries (LM/pLAD). A significant correlation was observed between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD and the ejection fraction at the peak of exercise (r ≈ –0.39, P < 0.0001); between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD and index of wall motion abnormalities (IWMA) at the peak of exercise (r ≈ 0.44, P < 0.0001); and between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD and dIWMA (r ≈ 0.41, P < 0.0001). Afterwards, severe ischemia in stress echocardiography tests was observed in this group. The average IWMA of these tests was found to be 2.3. Sixty-two angiograms were available for comparison with Doppler data. Conclusion: There is a significant correlation between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD/pLCx at rest and the severity of wall motion abnormalities during exercise tests.",
keywords = "coronary artery Doppler, Doppler flow aliasing, exercise stress echo, Transthoracic echocardiography",
author = "Angela Zagatina and Nadezhda Zhuravskaya and Yuliya Vareldzhyan and Maxim Kamenskikh and Dmitry Shmatov and Jozef Benacka and Martin Kucera and Peter Kruzliak",
year = "2018",
month = jun,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1177/0284185117733143",
language = "English",
volume = "59",
pages = "664--671",
journal = "Acta Radiologica",
issn = "0284-1851",
publisher = "SAGE",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Transthoracic Coronary Flow Data at Rest Predict High-Risk Stress Tests

AU - Zagatina, Angela

AU - Zhuravskaya, Nadezhda

AU - Vareldzhyan, Yuliya

AU - Kamenskikh, Maxim

AU - Shmatov, Dmitry

AU - Benacka, Jozef

AU - Kucera, Martin

AU - Kruzliak, Peter

PY - 2018/6/1

Y1 - 2018/6/1

N2 - Background: Several recent studies have reported the opportunity to diagnose significant narrowing of the coronary arteries without stress testing using local flow acceleration. Purpose: To define how often patients with increased coronary flow velocities at rest (≥ 0.70 m/s) have a positive exercise echocardiography test. Material and Methods: A total of 150 patients scheduled for exercise echocardiography were studied using transthoracic Doppler echocardiography in order to assess coronary artery flow velocity before exercise. Pulsed wave Doppler registered blood flow velocity placed on the color signal. The maximal diastolic velocity of coronary flow was measured. Results: Of participants, 16% had a velocity of more than 0.70 m/s in the left main/proximal left anterior/proximal left circumflex arteries (LM/pLAD). A significant correlation was observed between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD and the ejection fraction at the peak of exercise (r ≈ –0.39, P < 0.0001); between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD and index of wall motion abnormalities (IWMA) at the peak of exercise (r ≈ 0.44, P < 0.0001); and between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD and dIWMA (r ≈ 0.41, P < 0.0001). Afterwards, severe ischemia in stress echocardiography tests was observed in this group. The average IWMA of these tests was found to be 2.3. Sixty-two angiograms were available for comparison with Doppler data. Conclusion: There is a significant correlation between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD/pLCx at rest and the severity of wall motion abnormalities during exercise tests.

AB - Background: Several recent studies have reported the opportunity to diagnose significant narrowing of the coronary arteries without stress testing using local flow acceleration. Purpose: To define how often patients with increased coronary flow velocities at rest (≥ 0.70 m/s) have a positive exercise echocardiography test. Material and Methods: A total of 150 patients scheduled for exercise echocardiography were studied using transthoracic Doppler echocardiography in order to assess coronary artery flow velocity before exercise. Pulsed wave Doppler registered blood flow velocity placed on the color signal. The maximal diastolic velocity of coronary flow was measured. Results: Of participants, 16% had a velocity of more than 0.70 m/s in the left main/proximal left anterior/proximal left circumflex arteries (LM/pLAD). A significant correlation was observed between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD and the ejection fraction at the peak of exercise (r ≈ –0.39, P < 0.0001); between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD and index of wall motion abnormalities (IWMA) at the peak of exercise (r ≈ 0.44, P < 0.0001); and between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD and dIWMA (r ≈ 0.41, P < 0.0001). Afterwards, severe ischemia in stress echocardiography tests was observed in this group. The average IWMA of these tests was found to be 2.3. Sixty-two angiograms were available for comparison with Doppler data. Conclusion: There is a significant correlation between the value of the maximal velocity in LM/pLAD/pLCx at rest and the severity of wall motion abnormalities during exercise tests.

KW - coronary artery Doppler

KW - Doppler flow aliasing

KW - exercise stress echo

KW - Transthoracic echocardiography

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85046023570&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1177/0284185117733143

DO - 10.1177/0284185117733143

M3 - Article

C2 - 28958154

AN - SCOPUS:85046023570

VL - 59

SP - 664

EP - 671

JO - Acta Radiologica

JF - Acta Radiologica

SN - 0284-1851

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 43611866