STRESS TESTS REVEAL MORE THAN CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH

 

STRESS TESTS REVEAL MORE THAN CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH

    




The treadmill exercise test with electrocardiogram (ECG), also known as an exercise stress test, is one of the most familiar tests in medicine. While exercise testing typically focuses on diagnosing coronary artery disease, a recent study from the Mayo Clinic finds that exercise test abnormalities, such as low functional aerobic capacity, predicted non-cardiovascular causes of death, such as cancer and cardiovascular-related deaths. These new findings are published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

The exercise stress test is noninvasive, readily available, and provides important diagnostic information. In addition to the ECG, the test produces data on functional aerobic capacity, heart rate recovery, and chronotropic index, the standardized measure of heart rate during exercise that reflects age, resting heart rate, and fitness.

"In our exercise testing cohort, non-cardiovascular deaths were more frequently observed than cardiovascular deaths," says Thomas Allison, Ph.D., M.P.H., director of Mayo Clinic's Integrated Stress Testing Center and the study's senior author. "Though this was a cardiac stress test, we found that cancer was the leading cause of death, at 38%, whereas only 19% of deaths were cardiovascular. Exercise test results including low exercise capacity, low peak heart rate, and a slow recovery of the heart rate after exercise test were associated with increased mortality."

The study looked at 13,382 patients with no baseline cardiovascular issues or other severe diseases and who had completed exercise tests at Mayo Clinic between 1993 and 2010, then were followed closely for a median period of 12.7 years.

The findings suggest that clinicians should focus not only on ECG results but on data in the exercise test results, such as low functional aerobic capacity, low chronotropic index, and abnormal heart rate recovery. Dr. Allison says patients should be encouraged to increase their physical activity if these results are atypical, even if the ECG results show no significant cardiovascular-related risk.

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