Clinical symptomatology of coronary artery disease and results of exercise thallium scintigraphy: gender-related differences.

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1997-09-20
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Abstract
Exercise thallium stress test is the mainstay of the noninvasive assessment of patients with symptomatology suggestive of coronary artery disease. The diagnostic accuracy of thallium scintigraphy as a screening test for coronary artery disease in women as compared to men, however, remains controversial. In order to determine whether gender-related differences in the detection of coronary artery disease using exercise thallium scintigraphy are demonstrable in all age groups, we analyzed the exercise thallium results in 335 outpatients (189 male, 146 female), who were referred by their primary physicians to our institution for evaluation of clinically suspected coronary artery disease. Overall, 50.3 percent of men had a positive for ischemia thallium stress test vs 29.5 percent of women (p < 0.0002). In the subgroup of patients 65 years of age or above, 67.4 percent of men had a positive for ischemia thallium stress test vs 27.6 percent of women (p < 0.003). In the subgroup of patients upto 40 years of age, 37.9 percent of men had a positive for ischemia thallium stress test vs 25.0 percent of women (p = NS). We conclude that symptoms suggestive of coronary artery disease are less predictive of positive exercise thallium stress tests in women as compared to men even above age 65 when the prevalence of coronary artery disease is known to be similar. This suggests that women may have lower threshold for perception of symptoms or that physicians have lower threshold for referring women for screening of coronary artery disease.
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Kosmas CE, Mallozzi M, Moten M, Banka VS. Clinical symptomatology of coronary artery disease and results of exercise thallium scintigraphy: gender-related differences. Indian Heart Journal. 1997 Sep-Oct; 49(5): 497-501