Objective: The purpose of our study was to evaluate the predictive power of early postinfarction stress testing in survivors of uncomplicated MI treated with thrombolytics.
Methods: The study population consisted of 102 consecutive, thrombolyzed survivors (56 +/- 11 years) of acute, transmural myocardial infarction with uncomplicated postinfarction course. All patients were clinically stable in the postinfarction period and underwent cycle ergometry, 99mTc perfusion scintigraphy and dobutamine stress-echocardiography within three weeks after the acute event. Coronary angiography was used to determine the extent of CAD, LV ejection fraction (LVEF), TIMI grade and residual stenosis of the infarct-related coronary artery. A follow up questionnaire was performed one year after hospital discharge to determine the relation to the occurrence of cardiac events (unstable angina, reinfarction, PTCA, bypass surgery and death).
Results: 30 patients developed 34 cardiac events. Four patients died. Two thirds of the 'cardiac events' in the year of follow-up were revascularization procedures mostly selected by evidence of ischemia on 99mTc perfusion scintigraphy and/or stress-echocardiography. These two methods were significantly associated with the development of new cardiac events (stress-echocardiography: p < 0.01; 99mTc perfusion scintigraphy: p < 0.006). Parameters of bicycle ergometry and variables of coronary angiography were not related to an increased risk of future cardiac events. The number of 'hard cardiac events'--death or nonfatal AMI--was too small (8%) in these patients who are able to exercise to make statistical comparisons.
Conclusions: The study underlines the necessity of early noninvasive risk assessment to identify patients at a greater risk among survivors of uncomplicated AMI treated with thrombolytics who are clinically stable in the early postinfarction period. PTCA and coronary bypass surgery is performed in one third of these patients selected mostly by evidence of ischemia on 99mTc perfusion scintigraphy and/or stress-echocardiography. Results of bicycle ergometry are of limited value in these patients within the first year after acute myocardial infarction.