Exercise-induced prolongation of the infarct-related Q-waves as a marker of myocardial viability in the infarcted area

2004 
Abstract Objective : It is known that exercise-induced ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) may produce QRS prolongation in the surface electrocardiogram (ECG). To investigate the presence of exercise-induced Q-wave prolongation in patients with single-vessel CAD and Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI), in association with the presence of reversible perfusion defects during thallium scintigraphy in the infarcted area. Methods : 107 consecutive patients (89 males, mean age 56±8 years) were evaluated. All patients underwent coronary arteriography, maximal treadmill exercise testing and thallium-201 scintigraphy. Q-wave duration was measured both before exercise testing and during maximal heart rate from 12-lead ECGs recorded with a paper speed of 50 mm/s. Results : Only 57 out of the 107 studied patients showed reversible perfusion defects in the infarcted area during thallium scintigraphy. Q-wave duration was significantly increased from the resting to the stress ECG (ΔQ-wave duration) in patients with reversible perfusion defects in the infarcted areas (10±13 ms), but not in patients with fixed defects in the infarcted zone (−2.0±5 ms, p Conclusions : Exercise-induced Q-wave prolongation is demonstrated in those patients with single-vessel CAD and a recent MI who show reversible perfusion defects in thallium scintigraphy. Exercise-induced Q-wave prolongation was found to be a sensitive and specific ECG marker for the detection of myocardial viability in the infarcted area.
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