Exercise Testing in Aortic Stenosis: Safety, Tolerability, Clinical Benefits and Prognostic Value
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. How Is Exercise Testing Performed?
4. Symptoms
5. Physiological Measurements
6. Blunted BP Rise
7. Exaggerated BP Response
8. Abnormal Heart Rate Response to Exercise
9. Serial Testing
10. Exercise Stress Testing with Imaging
11. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Hemodynamic parameters |
Pre-exercise heart rate |
Pre-exercise blood pressure |
Peak heart rate |
Peak blood pressure |
Post-exercise blood pressure |
Exercise duration |
Exercise test stage at stopping |
Reason for stopping including symptoms |
Metabolic equivalents |
ECG measures to be monitored |
ST segment depression |
Premature ventricular contraction |
Arrhythmias (supraventricular tachycardia, atrial fibrillation) |
Target heart rate achieved? |
Limiting symptoms: |
Significant breathlessness |
Angina (chest constriction/tightness) |
Dizziness |
Ischemic ST segment changes and BP response: |
≥3–5 mm ST segment depression |
Blunted BP response (variously defined as failure of systolic BP to rise >25%; or a sustained fall in systolic BP > 20 mmHg from the previous stage or below the baseline level) |
Sustained tachyarrhythmias: |
Progressive ventricular arrhythmias >3 beats |
New onset atrial fibrillation |
Reduced functional capacity: |
Maximal exhaustion at low workload (or progressive decline in serial testing) |
Abnormal heart rate response: |
An early rapid rise in heart rate to at least 85% of target heart rate or a ≥50% increase from baseline within the first 6 min |
First Author, Year [Ref] | Study Design and Follow-Up | No. of Pts. | Age and Gender | Exercise Modeand Protocol | Exercise Echo | Clinical Events and Major Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Amato et al., 2001 [27] | Prospective 15 ± 12 months | 66 | 50 ± 15 years 67% men | Treadmill (Ellestad) | − | Exercise test was safe. Patients with positive stress test (67%) had a 7.6-fold increased risk of developing symptoms or sudden death at follow-up. |
Alborino et al., 2002 [26] | Prospective 36 months | 30 | 62 ± 14 years 67% men | Upright bicycle 25 W + 10–50 W 2nd min | − | Exercise test was safe. An abnormal test was found in 60% of patients. |
Das et al., 2005 [5] | Prospective 12 months | 125 | 56–74 years 68% men | Treadmill (modified Bruce) | − | Exercise test was safe and revealed symptoms in 37% of patients. |
Lancellotti et al., 2005 [28] | Prospective 15 ± 7 months | 69 | 66 ± 12 years 70% men | Semi-supine bicycle (25 + 25 W 2nd min) | + | Exercise test was safe. Abnormal exercise test was observed in 26% of patients. |
Maréchaux et al., 2007 [29] | Prospective 11 (2–40) months | 50 | 65 ± 13 years 54% men | Semi-supine bicycle ergometer (25 + 25 W) | + | Abnormal LV response (11% fall in mean EF to exercise) was found in 40% of patients. These were more likely to develop symptoms compared to those who showed a rise in EF on exercise. |
Peidro et al., 2007 [30] | Prospective 11 (5–19) months | 102 | 64 ± 14 years 61% men | Treadmill (Naughton) | − | Exercise test was safe. Exercise test was abnormal in 65.7% of patients. |
Lancellotti et al., 2008 [31] | Prospective Cross-sectional | 128 | Semi-supine bicycle on a tilting table (25 W + 25 W each 2nd min) | + | Exercise test was abnormal in 47% of patients, and mediated by larger increase in mean gradient and decrease/smaller increase in LV ejection fraction. | |
Lafitte et al., 2009 [32] | Prospective 12 months | 65 pts 60 controls | 70 ± 12 years 82% men, 66 ± 15 years 75% men | Treadmill Bruce (modified by 2 warm-up stages) | − | Exercise test was abnormal in 65% of patients. Impaired global longitudinal strain assessed by 2D was associated with abnormal exercise test and higher risk of cardiac events during follow-up. |
Laskey et al., 2009 [24] | Cross-sectional | 18 pts 11 controls | 60 ± 8 years 72% men, 53 ± 7 years 64% men | Supine bicycle (25 W + 25 W) | − | Compared with control subjects, patients with AS showed reduced arterial compliance and increased systemic vascular resistance at rest, but a further arterial stiffening and blunted increase in flow rate during exercise. |
Maréchaux et al., 2010 [33] | Retrospective 20 ± 14 months | 186 | 64 ± 15 years 64% men | Semi-supine bicycle 20–25 W + 20–25 W each 3rd min) | + | Exercise test was abnormal in 27% of patients. Exercise echocardiography provided additional prognostic information. |
Rajani et al., 2010 [34] | Prospective Cross-sectional | 38 | 63 (29–83) years, 84% men | Treadmill Bruce (modified by 2 warm-up stages) | − | Symptoms were revealed in 26% of patients and associated with lower peak myocardial VO2, stroke index, and a trend towards a blunted fall in systemic vascular resistance. BNP was the strongest resting predictor of revealed symptoms. |
Dalsgaard et al., 2010 [21] | Prospective Cross-sectional | 29 | 69 ± 8 years 66% men | CPET with multistage supine bicycle (25 W + 25 W each 2nd min) | − | Exercise test was safe. Symptoms were revealed in 69% of patients. The marker of diastolic dysfunction were closely related to the severity of AS. |
Donal et al., 2011 [35] | Prospective Cross-sectional | 207 pts 43 control subjects | 67 ± 11 years 66% men 68 ± 11 years 71% men | Graded semi-supine bicycle on tilting table (30 W + 20 W 2nd min) | + | Exercise test was abnormal in 34% of patients. Reduced longitudinal myocardial function and missing contractile reserve during exercise in spite of normal EF at rest. |
Lancellotti et al., 2012 [36] | Prospective Cross-sectional | 105 | 71 ± 9 years 59% men | Semi-supine bicycle on a tilting table (25 W + 25 W each 2nd min) | + | Exercise pulmonary hypertension was found in 55% of patients and was associated with a 2-fold increased risk of cardiac events. Male gender, resting SPAP, and measures of diastolic dysfunction during exercise were the main determinants of exercise pulmonary hypertension. |
Dulgheru et al., 2013 [37] | Cross-sectional | 62 | 65 ± 13 years 68% men | Treadmill CPET (modified Bruce) | − | No adverse event. Older age and higher global LV hemodynamic load were the main determinants of exercise capacity, which was not influenced by the conventional parameter of AS severity. |
Levy et al., 2014 [38] | Prospective 28 ± 31 months | 43 | 69 ± 13 years 72% men | CPET with upright bicycle. Ramp (20 W/min or 10 W/min) after a 1st min warm-up at 20 W | − | Exercise test was abnormal in 28% of patients. CPET better characterized revealed symptoms. Peak VO2 ≤ 14 mL/kg/min, VE/VCO2 slope > 34 were associated with abnormal exercise test. |
Lumley et al., 2016 [23] | Cross-sectional | 22 pts 38 control subjects | 69 ± 8 years 82% men, 61 ± 10 years 74% men | Supine bicycle (25 + 25 W each 2nd min) | + | Exercise test during cardiac catheterization was safe and feasible. Ischemia in AS was not related to microvascular disease, but rather to abnormal cardiac-coronary coupling. |
Masri et al., 2016 [20] | Retrospective 82.8 ± 39.6 months | 533 | 66 ± 13 years 78% men | Treadmill (Bruce, modified Bruce, Cornell, Naughton) | + | No adverse event. Symptoms were revealed in 19% of patients. |
Pérez del Villar et al., 2017 [22] | Cross-sectional | 20 | 77 ± 16 years 85% women | Ergometer, 30° lateral decubitus (25 + 25 W each 3rd min) | + | Exercise testing was safe and feasible. Invasive hemodynamic monitoring showed that the aortic valve was highly dynamic and flow dependent. |
Saeed et al., 2018 [16] | Retrospective 34.9 ± 35.1 months | 316 | 65 ± 12 years 67% men | Treadmill (Bruce, modified by 2 warm-up stages) | No adverse event. Revealed symptoms in 29% of patients. lower peak SBP and rapid early rise in heart rate were associated with a higher risk of revealed Symptoms, while the use of antihypertensive treatment was associated with a lower risk of revealed symptoms. Serial testing had incremental prognostic value over baseline test. |
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Saeed, S.; Chambers, J.B. Exercise Testing in Aortic Stenosis: Safety, Tolerability, Clinical Benefits and Prognostic Value. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 4983. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11174983
Saeed S, Chambers JB. Exercise Testing in Aortic Stenosis: Safety, Tolerability, Clinical Benefits and Prognostic Value. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2022; 11(17):4983. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11174983
Chicago/Turabian StyleSaeed, Sahrai, and John B. Chambers. 2022. "Exercise Testing in Aortic Stenosis: Safety, Tolerability, Clinical Benefits and Prognostic Value" Journal of Clinical Medicine 11, no. 17: 4983. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11174983
APA StyleSaeed, S., & Chambers, J. B. (2022). Exercise Testing in Aortic Stenosis: Safety, Tolerability, Clinical Benefits and Prognostic Value. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(17), 4983. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11174983