-
Vascular Health and Risk Management
-
About Dovepress
Open access peer-reviewed scientific and medical journals.
-
Open Access
Dove Medical Press is now a member of the Open Access Initiative
-
An Author's Guide
A guide to help authors get their paper published.
-
Advocacy
Support Open Access and Dove Press
-
Reprints
Promotional Article Monitoring - further details
-
Favored Author Program
Real benefits for authors, including fast-track processing of papers.
ST segment depression in hypertensive patients: A comparison of exercise test versus Holter ECG
Original Research
(3072) Views (781) Full article downloads
Authors: Sakir Uen, Rolf Fimmers, Burkhard Weisser, Osman Balta, Georg Nickenig, Thomas Mengden
Published Date October 2008
Volume 2008:4(5) Pages 1073 - 1080
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/VHRM.S2419
Sakir Uen1, Rolf Fimmers2, Burkhard Weisser3, Osman Balta1, Georg Nickenig1, Thomas Mengden1
1Division of Hypertension and Vascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine II, University Clinic, Bonn, Germany; 2Department of Biometry and Medical Statistics, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany; 3Department of Sports Medicine, University of Kiel, Kiel, Germany
Introduction: This study compared ST segment depression (ST depression) during cycle ergometry (ergometry) versus simultaneous 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure measurement and electrocardiogram recording (24-h ABPM/ECG) during everyday life.
Methods: In a German multicenter study, ergometry and 24-h ABPM/ECG records of 239 hypertensive patients were retrospectively analyzed. ST depression was defined as an ST segment depression (1 mm limb or chest recordings V1 to V6) in an incremental cycle ergometry, or 1 mm in the 24-h ABPM/ECG recording under everyday conditions. Blood pressure parameters at the onset of ST depression in the context of the respective method were compared.
Results: 18 patients had ST depression only in ergometry (group B), 23 had ST depression only during 24-h ABPM/ECG monitoring (group C) and 28 patients had ST depression with both methods (group D). Group A had no ST depression with any method. In group D, at the onset of ST depression with 24-h ABPM/ECG investigation, all parameters except diastolic blood pressure were significantly lower compared with the corresponding parameters at the onset of ST depression with ergometry (systolic blood pressure: 148 ± 19 vers 188 ± 35 mmHg, p < 0.001; heart rate: 93 ± 12 vs 120 ± 21 beat/min, p < 0.0001; double product: 13,714 ± 2315 vs 22,992 ± 3,985 mmHg/min), p < 0.0001).
Conclusion: ST depressions during everyday life detected by 24-h ABPM/ECG are characterized by a substantially lower triggering threshold for blood pressure level parameters compared with ergometry. The two methods detecting ischemia do not replace but complement each other.
Keywords: ST segment depression, arterial hypertension, blood pressure measurement, combined 24-h ABPM/ECG
Corrigendum for this paper has been published
- Join ISVH
Be part of the World's leading experts in vascular health by joining the International Society of Vascular Health (ISVH)
- Testimonials
"... I was impressed at the rapidity of publication from submission to final acceptance." Dr Edwin Thrower, PhD, Yale University
- The western diet and lifestyle and diseases of civilization
- Stiffness of the large arteries in individuals with and without Down syndrome
- Effects of Azelnidipine plus OlmesaRTAn versus amlodipine plus olmesartan on central blood pressure and left ventricular mass index: the AORTA study
- Vascular effects of rapid-acting insulin analogs in the diabetic patient: a review




