NON-Invasive Examinations of Coronary Artery Disease

Overview

The aim of the study is to evaluate and compare the value of 5 different non-invasive diagnostic methods in patients with chest pain suspected for coronary artery disease. The investigators intend to include 200 patients over a 3 year period in the study. The participants will be recruited from patients referred to coronary angiography at the institution. Before the angiography the participants will (1) test the effect of sublingual Nitroglycerin, (2) give their medical history so mathematical models can estimate the probability of the presence of coronary artery disease, (3) take part in a contrast stress echocardiography and (4) a 2D-strain stress echocardiography and a myocardial scintigraphy. Stenosis found at the angiography will be the gold standard.

Study Type

  • Study Type: Observational
  • Study Design
    • Time Perspective: Prospective
  • Study Primary Completion Date: January 2012

Detailed Description

The aim of the study is to evaluate the diagnostic value of various non-invasive methods. The study is divided into five substudies: Substudy NITRO Purpose: To investigate whether a subjective effect of Nitroglycerine is associated with significantly narrowed coronary arteries. The participants are instructed to alternate between rest and Nitroglycerine as treatment for chest pain attacks during a 2 week period. Chest pain score is recorded in a diary handed out at day 1 together with 30 tablets Nitroglycerine in the maximal tolerated dose. Substudy SCORE Aim: To test and compare the ability of different statistical methods using clinical data to predict the presence of narrowed coronary arteries in a contemporary Danish population. Substudy CONTRAST Aim: To evaluate if the blood flow in an area in the heart muscle measured by contrast adenosine stress echocardiography can predict the presence of significant stenosis in the coronary artery supplying the area. Substudy 2D strain Aim: To Evaluate if lack of increase in 2D strain during adenosine stress echocardiography can predict the presence of narrowed coronary arteries. Substudy SPECT Aim: To evaluate whether the result of a myocardial scintigraphy can predict symptomatic chest pain relief 6 months after a coronary angiography and possible treatment with balloon or bypass surgery. Participants: Annually around 1,500 coronary angiographies are performed at Region Hospital Herning. We intend to include 200 patients referred by their physicians to coronary angiography in the study and expect the data collection phase to last 3 years.

Participating in This Clinical Trial

Inclusion Criteria

1. Intermittent episodes of chest pain (more than two attacks, minimum one attack/week) 2. Signed written informed consent 3. Sinus rhythm (ECG) 4. Age above 18 years Exclusion Criteria:

1. Previously (known) myocardial infarction or unstable angina with dynamic changes in the ECG or biomarkers (serology) 2. CA performed earlier in life 3. Known significant cardiac valve disease 4. Asthma (not COPD) 5. Incapable of performing an exercise test 6. Malignant Disease 7. Senile dementia or other conditions causing impaired cooperation 8. Previous participation in the project 9. NTG intolerance 10. Pregnancy 11. Bundle branch block (QRS > 120 ms) 12. ECG changes:

  • Pathologic Q-wave in at least two leads: – QS-complex or Q-wave > 0.02 sec. in V2-V3 – QS-complex or Q-wave > 0.03 sec. and > 0.1 mV in I, II, aVL, aVF or V4-V6 – Pathologic negative T-wave (in V3-6 and I, II) unless this is part of a left ventricular hypertrophy and strain pattern 13. Brady pacemaker

Gender Eligibility: All

Minimum Age: 18 Years

Maximum Age: N/A

Are Healthy Volunteers Accepted: No

Investigator Details

  • Lead Sponsor
    • Herning Hospital
  • Provider of Information About this Clinical Study
    • Ole May, Cardiovascular Research Unit, Region Hospital Herning
  • Overall Official(s)
    • Ole May, MD, Ph.D., Principal Investigator, Cardiovascular Research Unit

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