ender and several anatomical and functional characteristics are associated with an increased incidence of abnormal ST-segment responses to exercise in the absence of coronary artery disease (CAD). Subsets with an increased incidence of false-positive (FP) exercise ECG responses with respect to ischemia include middle-aged women, 1-3 and patients with mitral valve prolapse. 1,4,5 Patients with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) form a separate subset with the potential for inadequate myocardial perfusion in the absence of significant CAD. 4,6 Advanced ECG analysis approaches applicable to the clinical evaluation of the standard exercise ECG in these subjects are currently unavailable and need to be developed.The ST slope, usually computed as the slope between the J-point and the J80, has been mainly used for differentiating the configuration of ST-segment depression (ie, upsloping, horizontal, and downsloping). The latter two are considered more specific for myocardial ischemia than the upsloping shape. 1,7 However, in CAD, the shape often changes with time during the test and a relatively characterCirculation Journal Vol. 68, October 2004 istic time-course can be seen. ST-segment depression during exercise changes from upsloping (or horizontal) to downsloping in the early recovery at 2-4 min; that is, the ST slope decreases in early recovery ( Fig 1A). 7,8 Subsequently, both ST-segment depression and the ST slope return gradually toward the baseline; that is, the ST slope increases in late recovery. On the other hand, in many subjects with FP ST-segment depression (FPD) (Fig 1B), the downsloping shape appears, not in the early, but in the late recovery. Unlike in CAD, the ST slope monotonically decreases from early to late recovery, possibly serving as the differentiating characteristic. 5,8 We thus hypothesized that the temporal changes in the ST slope from early to late recovery are capable of differentiating these 2 groups and we performed high-resolution computer analysis of the ST slope in the recovery in a relatively large population with normal resting ECGs. Because the majority of subjects with normal exercise single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) results are no longer referred for coronary angiography in the clinical practice, we used this technique for the selection of FPD subjects. True-positive (TP) results were defined when both angiographic and exercise SPECT images were abnormal.
Methods
Study PopulationFrom the digitized ECG recordings consecutively obtained during routine treadmill testing for the evaluation of CAD, 198 patients (62±9 years) with an exerciseinduced significant ST-segment depression were recruited. Patients were excluded if they had resting ECG abnor-
Methods and ResultsTreadmill digitized ECG from patients with significant ST-segment depressions and normal resting ECG were analyzed in 134 patients with CAD on angiography (>50% narrowing) and reversible perfusion defects (TP group), and 64 subjects with normal perfusion (FP group) on exercise single photon emissi...