The assessment of chronic pharmacological treatment of stable angina requires serial exercise stress testings. It is well known that exercise tolerance can be improved by the training effect of performing repeated testings. Our study investigated the values of heart rate, systolic blood pressure, rate-pressure product, and duration of exercise at 0.1 mV ST depression during exercise and the same parameters plus the maximal ST-segment depression at peak exercise, collected from three different tests. The first and second were performed at one-week intervals before, and the third (75 days after the first), was performed after a double-blind study with a drug versus placebo. We found a significant increase of exercise duration at 0.1 mV ST depression and at peak exercise, while 6 of 12 patients increased exercise duration from the second to the third test. Individual variability of exercise duration showed increasing values, ranging from 0 to 71% (first vs. third test). In contrast, the ratio of heart rate and systolic blood pressure did not differ between the tests. Our data criticized the use of mean values of exercise time for pharmacological studies; moreover, individual variability could affect results independently of drug or placebo administration. These findings should be taken into account in order to exclude misleading results.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/clc.4960120107DOI Listing

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