Abstract
Exercise tests were performed in 14 patients with untreated variant angina with frequent spontaneous attacks and in 15 patients after treatment abolished the attacks. (1) Anginal attacks associated with ST elevation were induced by exercise in 79% of untreated patients. By contrast, ST elevation was not observed in treated patients and ST depression was induced in 53% of the cases. (2) Exercise-induced ST elevation in untreated patients was shown in the same leads as the spontaneous attacks. (3) Exercise-induced ST elevation appeared initially during the recovery phase after exercise in 36% of untreated patients. Exercise-induced ST depression appeared during or immediately after exercise. (4) The reproducibility of exercise-induced ST elevation was low with repeated tests at different stages, but exercise-induced ST depression was consistently observed. (5) The exercise-induced ST depression and lack of ST changes in treated patients were highly suggestive of the presence and absence of organic coronary artery disease, respectively. However, the exercise-induced ST elevation in untreated patients did not differentiate between the presence or absence of organic stenosis of the coronary arteries. The results of exercise tests vary with the stage of variant angina. It is suggested that a coronary arterial spasm is a trigger mechanism for exercise-induced angina in cases of variant angina with frequent spontaneous attacks.