Affiliations 

  • 1 Children's Health and Exercise Research Centre (CHERC), Public Health and Sports Sciences, Faculty of Life and Health Sciences, University of Exeter Medical School, St Luke's Campus, Heavitree Road, Exeter EX1 2LU, UK
  • 2 Population and Translational Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, Beacon House, Queens Rd, BS8 1QU, UK
  • 3 Congenital Heart Unit, Bristol Royal Hospital for Children and Heart Institute, Upper Maudlin St, BS2 8BJ, Bristol, UK
  • 4 Sports Cardiology and Screening Department, ASPETAR Qatar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, Sports City Street, Inside Aspire Zone, Al Buwairda St, Doha, Qatar
Eur Heart J Imaging Methods Pract, 2024 Jan;2(1):qyae021.
PMID: 39045209 DOI: 10.1093/ehjimp/qyae021

Abstract

AIMS: The value of cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) and exercise stress echocardiography (ESE) in managing cardiac disease is well known, but no standard CPET-ESE protocol is currently recommended. This pilot study aims to compare feasibility and cardiac function responses between a new high-intensity single-stage combined test (CPET-hiESE) and a standard maximal ESE (smESE).

METHODS AND RESULTS: After screening and maximal CPET, all volunteers (n = 21) underwent three ESE modalities: (i) based on the gas exchange threshold (hiESE-GET, 40% of peak-GET, 6 min), (ii) based on heart rate (HR) (hiESE-HR, 80% of peak HR, 6 min), and (iii) smESE (85% of predicted peak HR for age, 3 min). Speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) and tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) were measured at each step. There was superior image quality and data completeness for the right ventricle strain for both hiESE modalities compared with smESE (71.4 and 76.2 vs. 42.9%, P = 0.07). Left ventricular STE data completeness was similar for all three conditions. Despite systematically higher HR, work rate and levels of exertion in the smESE compared with hiESE, STE and TDI parameters were not systematically different. Concordance correlation coefficients ranged from 0.56 to 0.88, lowest for strain rate parameters and mean difference from -0.34 to 1.53, highest for TDI measurements.

CONCLUSION: The novel CPET-hiESE protocol allowed for better data completeness, at lower levels of exertion compared with smESE, without systematically different cardiac reserve measurements in healthy participants. This single-stage protocol can be individualized to clinical populations, which would provide practical advantages to standard testing.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.