Publications by authors named "Emily Bainter"

Purpose: Arm exercise is an alternative to pharmacologic stress testing for >50% of patients unable to perform treadmill exercise, but no data exist regarding the effect of attained peak arm exercise heart rate on test sensitivity. Thus, the purpose of this investigation was to characterize the relationship of peak arm exercise heart rate responses to abnormal stress test findings, coronary revascularization, and mortality in patients unable to perform leg exercise.

Methods: From 1997 until 2002, arm cycle ergometer stress tests were performed in 443 consecutive veterans age 64.

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Objective: Arm exercise stress testing may be an equivalent or better predictor of mortality outcome than pharmacological stress imaging for the ≥50% for patients unable to perform leg exercise. Thus, our objective was to develop an arm exercise ECG stress test scoring system, analogous to the Duke Treadmill Score, for predicting outcome in these individuals.

Methods: In this retrospective observational cohort study, arm exercise ECG stress tests were performed in 443 consecutive veterans aged 64.

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Background: No data exist comparing outcome prediction from arm exercise vs pharmacologic myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) stress test variables in patients unable to perform treadmill exercise.

Methods: In this retrospective study, 2,173 consecutive lower extremity disabled veterans aged 65.4 ± 11.

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Introduction: Pharmacologic evaluations constitute ≥50% of imaging stress tests, but exercise reduces adverse effects, improves myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) quality and diagnostic results, and provides powerful prognostic and clinically important information on exercise capacity and cardiovascular responses to the relevant physiologic stress of exercise. Thus, our purpose was to determine whether arm exercise and MPI variables predict long-term outcome in patients who cannot perform leg exercise.

Methods: We performed arm exercise MPI stress tests in 253 consecutive patients age 64.

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Background: Treadmill exercise variables are powerful predictors of all-cause mortality but are unobtainable in at least 50% of patients because of disabilities precluding lower extremity exercise. Arm exercise stress testing is a potentially cost-effective alternative, but no long-term outcome data are available.

Methods: We performed arm ergometer stress tests on 446 veterans aged 64.

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