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BACKGROUND: Exercise testing in women is associated with a high incidence of false-positive ECG changes and should be combined with an imaging study. The QT dispersion (QTD), recorded as the difference between maximum and minimum QT intervals on a 12-lead ECG, is sensitive to myocardial ischemia and may improve the accuracy of exercise testing in women. METHODS AND RESULTS: Exercise ECGs were analyzed in 64 women who had undergone exercise ECG and coronary angiography for clinical indications: 20 patients with normal exercise stress test and nonsignificant ( or = 1 mm ST-segment depression or reversible perfusion defects) and significant CAD (true-positive; TP group), and 24 patients with positive exercise stress tests but no significant CAD (false-positive; FP group). The exercise QTD was 45+/-15 ms in TN, 80+/-23 ms in TP (P 60 ms had a sensitivity of 70% and specificity of 95% for the diagnosis of significant CAD compared with 55% (P or = 1 mm ST-segment depression during stress. When QTD of > 60 ms was added to ST-segment depression as a condition for positive test, the specificity increased to 100%. CONCLUSIONS: Exercise QTD is an easily measurable ECG variable that significantly increases the accuracy of exercise testing in women.
Stoletniy et al. (Tue,) studied this question.