Safety profile and utility of treadmill exercise in patients with high-gradient hypertrophic cardiomyopathy - 18/04/17
Abstract |
Background |
Exercise echocardiography in the evaluation of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) provides valuable information for risk stratification, selection of optimal treatment, and prognostication. However, HCM patients with left ventricular outflow tract gradients ≥30mm Hg are often excluded from exercise testing because of safety considerations. We examined the safety and utility of exercise testing in patients with high-gradient HCM.
Methods |
We evaluated clinical characteristics, hemodynamics, and imaging variables in 499 consecutive patients with HCM who performed 959 exercise tests. Patients were divided based on peak left ventricular outflow tract gradients using a 30-mm Hg threshold into the following: obstructive (n=152), labile-obstructive (n=178), and nonobstructive (n=169) groups.
Results |
There were no deaths during exercise testing. We noted 20 complications (2.1% of tests) including 3 serious ventricular arrhythmias (0.3% of tests). There was no difference in complication rate between groups. Patients with obstructive HCM had a higher frequency of abnormal blood pressure response (obstructive: 53% vs labile: obstructive: 41% and nonobstructive: 37%; P=.008). Obstructive patients also displayed a lower work capacity (obstructive: 8.4±3.4 vs labile obstructive: 10.9±4.2 and nonobstructive: 10.2±4.0, metabolic equivalent; P<.001). Exercise testing provided incremental information regarding sudden cardiac death risk in 19% of patients with high-gradient HCM, and we found a poor correlation between patient-reported functional class and work capacity.
Conclusion |
Our results suggest that exercise testing in HCM is safe, and serious adverse events are rare. Although numbers are limited, exercise testing in high-gradient HCM appears to confer no significant additional safety hazard in our selected cohort and could potentially provide valuable information.
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Financial support: This work was supported in part by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (HL098046) and the John Taylor Babbit Foundation. Lars L. Sorensen is supported in part by a grant from Ingenor August Wedell Erichsens legat, Snedkermester Sophus Jacobsen og Hustru Fond, and Direktor Jacob Madsen and Olga Madsens Fond. |
Vol 184
P. 47-54 - février 2017 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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