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Angiology
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Transient U Wave Inversion During Treadmill Exercise Testing in Patients with Left Anterior Descending Coronary Artery Disease

Koji Kodama, MD

The Department of Internal Medicine Yawatahama General Hospital 1-638 Ohira, Yawatahama-shi Ehime 796-8502 Japan

Go Hiasa, MD

Tomoaki Ohtsuka, MD

Shuntaro Ikeda, MD

Hidetoshi Hashida, MD

Taishi Kuwahara, MD

Yuji Hara, MD

Yuji Shigematsu, MD

Mareomi Hamada, MD, FACC

Kunio Hiwada, MD, FACA

The transient U wave inversion during exercise is specific for detecting left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) disease. In a homogeneous patient group restricted to LAD disease, however, the significance of the electrocardiographic finding has not yet been clarified. Thus, clinical characteristics in patients with angiographically documented one-vessel disease of the LAD and exercise-induced U wave inversion were delineated. Symptom-limited treadmill exercise testing was performed in 60 patients (43 men, 17 women; mean age 64 ±8 years) with angina pectoris whose culprit lesion was located only in the LAD. U wave polarity and amplitude were determined before, during, and after exercise with the P-Q segment as the isoelectric line. Exercise-induced transient U wave inversion was defined as positive when there was a discrete negative deflection ≥ 0.05 mV within the T-P segment. Of all patients, 16 (27%) had exercise-induced U (continued on next page) wave inversion. There were no differences in age, male gender, antianginal medication use, and coronary angiographic data between the two patients groups: patients with and without U wave inversion. Heart rate and double product of heart rate and systemic systolic blood pressure at peak exercise were also similar. Prevalence of abnormal exercise-induced S-T segment shift was 94% (15 of 16 patients) and 61% (27 of 44 patients) of patients with and without U wave inversion, respectively. The difference was statistically significant (p = 0.02). Among patients with exercise-induced S-T segment shift, the proportion of patients with S-T segment elevation to all the patients was larger in patients with U wave inversion than in patients without U wave inversion [3 (20%) of 15 patients vs 0 (0%) of 27 patients, p=0.03)]. In conclusion, the exercise-induced U wave inversion in patients with one-vessel disease of the LAD indicates the severe degree of myocardial ischemia induced in the territory perfused by the LAD. However, the elec trocardiographic finding does not appear to have independent significance since it closely correlates with the presence of S-T segment shift.

Angiology, Vol. 51, No. 7, 581-589 (2000)
DOI: 10.1177/000331970005100706


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