Stress Testing
Cardiologists commonly use stress tests to distinguish chest pain
related to heart problems from chest pain caused by other ailments
such as acid indigestion and inflammation of the chest wall. Depending
on the degree of suspicion for heart disease, your ability to exercise
and your other related medical problems, the cardiologist may recommend
one of several alternative types of stress tests.
Treadmill Exercise Stress Testing
The
treadmill test is the oldest of the different modalities. For this
test, patients walk on a treadmill, while a trained technician monitors
the blood pressure, pulse rate and a continuous electrocardiogram.
The technician also questions the patient at set time intervals
regarding symptoms such as chest pain, difficulty breathing, and
lightheadedness.
The major advantage of treadmill exercise testing over chemical
stress tests is the additional information the cardiologists gain
by monitoring your response to exercise. Scientific data show patients
who can exercise more strenuously are less likely to suffer life
threatening heart attacks.
Treadmill stress testing is not one hundred percent accurate. Even
experienced cardiologists will not detect every single patient with
coronary artery disease from a treadmill stress test alone. Additional
testing may be required and cardiologists will often combine the
treadmill test with pictures of the heart obtained through nuclear
imaging.
Chemical Stress Testing
Many patients cannot exercise on a treadmill due to back problems,
leg pain, lung disease or other coexisting medical problems. If
you fall into this category, we often use medications to speed up
the heart rate and simulate exercise. We use an injected medicine
called adenosine for performing our nuclear stress tests and an
infusion called dobutamine for performing stress echocardiograms.
Nuclear Stress Testing
The term nuclear stress test refers to the modality used to obtain
pictures of your heart. We obtain these pictures before and after exercise
or before and after an injection of adenosine to speed up the heart
rate. Our trained technologists will place an intravenous line
prior to the test and will administer a small dose of a radioactive
isotope agent. The radioactive isotope travels with your blood to different
regions of the heart muscle and our gamma camera takes pictures
of the heart to determine which areas of the heart muscle receive
adequate amounts of blood. Those areas scarred from prior heart
attacks will not receive blood and subsequently will not absorb
the isotope.
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Next we take a second set of pictures after administering a medication
called adenosine or performing a treadmill exercise test. As the
heart pumps harder with exercise or medication, more blood will
flow to the muscle of the heart. Those areas of heart muscle connected
to blocked arteries will not receive increased blood flow and subsequently
will not absorb the radioactive isotope. Through this method our
cardiologists can detect if block arteries exist and how severe
the obstructions are.
Stress Echocardiogram
In some cases, our cardiologists may recommend using sound waves
in the form of ultrasound to visualize the heart. When performing
stress echocardiography our technicians will image the heart at
rest and than image the heart again after exercise or administration
of an infusion called dobutamine. The heart muscle beats more forcefully
with exercise or dobutamine administration and those areas of the
heart receiving inadequate blood flow from blocked arteries will
not pump as vigorously as normal areas of the heart.
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