“…Furthermore, recent work in which regional myocardial perfusion was assessed with rubidium-82 and positron-emission tomography in conjunction with electrocardiographic observations has further validated the use of ST segment depression as a marker of ischemia in such patients, even in the absence of symptoms.9 ' 10 The ambulatory monitoring studies in the group I patients with inducible ischemia on exercise confirmed the findings of several previous studies '13 on solved by 5 or less minutes after exercise have very little or no ischemic activity out of hospital, which may also be reflected in a better prognosis.3-7 (4) In contrast, patients who develop ischemia after 6 min of exercise or less or at heart rates of less than 150 beats/ min, and those in whom ischemic changes persist for more than 5 min after exercise, are likely to have much more active myocardial ischemia out of hospital, which may in turn be related to an adverse prognosis. [3][4][5][6][7] There is no indication that ambulatory monitoring of ischemic ST segment changes is superior to the exercise test for detection of ischemic heart disease, but it has provided a different picture of the pathophysiology of active transient myocardial ischemia, which is one of the potentially damaging aspects of coronary artery disease. The greater frequency and duration of transient ischemia out of hospital shown in our patients with lower ischemic thresholds and more persistent ischemia during exercise testing may explain the poorer prognosis in such patients.3 7 However, there was a wide range of ischemic activity out of hospital in these patients, which raises the possibility that characterizing such disease activity during daily life may be Vol.…”