1985 Volume 26 Issue 2 Pages 179-189
In order to determine whether painless ST changes represent myocardial ischemia, we studied regional myocardial perfusion in patients with angina pectoris who showed painless ST-segment depression during a treadmill exercise test.
Twenty-one patients were evaluated by myocardial imaging using thallium-201 injected intravenously during exercise when painless ST-segment depression was evident. The same examination was repeated in 5 of the above patients when they showed ST-segment depression with chest pain. Myocardial images obtained during painless ST-segment depression revealed perfusion defects in 15 of 21 patients (71%). Images obtained during STsegment depression with chest pain showed perfusion defects in all 5 patients (100%) including 3 patients who demonstrated no defects during painless ST-segment depression. In these 5 patients, the ST-segment depression associated with pain was significantly greater than that without pain (3.4±1.1 vs 2.1±1.1mm, p<0.01).
These results suggest that the majority of episodes of painless ST-segment depression occurring during exercise are accompanied by regional myocardial perfusion abnormalities and that transient painless ST-segment depression in patients with angina pectoris might represent less severe myocardial ischemia.