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A Comparison of Dobutamine Infusion and Supine Bicycle Exercise for Radionuclide Cardiac Stress Testing
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1984
Year
Physical ActivityHeart FailureDobutamine InfusionPharmacotherapyRadionuclide Cardiac StressKinesiologyExerciseSupine Bicycle TestingApplied PhysiologyClinical ExerciseInotropic Drug DobutamineBicycle ExerciseCardiologyCardiac MechanicHealth SciencesSupine Bicycle ExerciseExercise ScienceCardiogenic ShockCardiovascular DiseaseExercise PhysiologyMedicineAnesthesiology
We have compared the inotropic drug dobutamine to supine bicycle exercise as a means of inducing stress in radionuclide ventriculography studies. Dobutamine has the following properties, making it favorable for widespread usage: 1) ability to be given safely in a peripheral vein, 2) rapid onset, and 3) short duration of action. Each patient underwent supine bicycle progressive resistance testing of 2 minutes per stage followed 30 minutes later by dobutamine administration. Accuracy of diagnosis was 0.93 and sensitivity was 0.89 with dobutamine, while with bicycle the accuracy was 0.93 and sensitivity was 0.94. While not designed to replace supine bicycle testing, incremental infusions of dobutamine appear to be nearly equal in accuracy and sensitivity, providing a satisfactory technique for cardiac evaluation of previously excluded patients.