22 research outputs found

    Exercise-induced QT/R-R-interval hysteresis as a predictor of myocardial ischemia

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    Abstract: Objectives: Exercise-induced QT/RR hysteresis exists when, for a given R-R interval, the QT interval duration is shorter during recovery after exercise than during exercise. We sought to assess the association between QT/RR hysteresis and imaging evidence of myocardial ischemia. Background: Because ischemia induces cellular disturbances known to decrease membrane action potential duration, we hypothesized a correlation between QT/RR and myocardial ischemia

    Relative risk forests for exercise heart rate recovery as a predictor of mortality

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    Recent studies have confirmed heart rate fall after treadmill exercise testing, or heart rate recovery, as a powerful predictor of mortality from heart disease. Heart rate recovery depends on central reactivation of vagal tone and decreased vagal activity is a risk factor for death. If heart rate recovery is defined as the fall in heart rate after 1 minute following peak exercise, then a heart rate recovery value of 12 beats per minute (bpm) or lower has been shown to be a good prognostic threshold for identifying patients at high risk. Although this finding establishes a simple, useful relationship between heart recovery and mortality, a working understanding of how heart rate recovery interacts with other characteristics of a patient in determining risk of death is still largely unexplored. Such knowledge, addressed in this article, could improve the prognostic value of the exercise test. Our analysis is based on over 23,000 patients who underwent exercise testing. A rich assortment of data was collected on these patients, including clinical and physiological information, heart rate recovery, and other exercise test performance measures. Our approach was to grow relative risk forests, a novel method that combines random forest methodology with survival trees grown using Poisson likelihoods. Our analysis reveals a complex relationship between peak heart rate, age, level of fitness, heart rate recovery, and risk of death
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