Brief Answer:
See below
Detailed Answer:
Dear XXXXXXX
Thanks for the follow up. It seems that to start off, your heart looked a bit thick, that is what LVH means; it is common in patients with high blood pressure. Because of that, your resting ECG had non specific ST and T wave changes, which make the interpretation at peak stress less valid.
The great thing is that you had nuclear images of the heart, and it did not show any evidence of blockages decreasing perfusion; the squeezing function looks great as well, and you reached
In your case, I would trust more the images than the ECG.
Only if your physician continues to highly suspect that the pain comes from your heart he would recommend the next step, which would be a coronary angiogram (dye through a catheter to arteries of the heart)
Hope that helps, wish you the best,
Dr Brenes-Salazar MD
Mayo Clinic MN
Cardiology
We use cookies in order to offer you most relevant experience and using this website you acknowledge that you have already read and understood our
Privacy Policy
What Do These Nuclear Stress Test Results Indicate?
Brief Answer:
See below
Detailed Answer:
Dear XXXXXXX
Thanks for the follow up. It seems that to start off, your heart looked a bit thick, that is what LVH means; it is common in patients with high blood pressure. Because of that, your resting ECG had non specific ST and T wave changes, which make the interpretation at peak stress less valid.
The great thing is that you had nuclear images of the heart, and it did not show any evidence of blockages decreasing perfusion; the squeezing function looks great as well, and you reached
In your case, I would trust more the images than the ECG.
Only if your physician continues to highly suspect that the pain comes from your heart he would recommend the next step, which would be a coronary angiogram (dye through a catheter to arteries of the heart)
Hope that helps, wish you the best,
Dr Brenes-Salazar MD
Mayo Clinic MN
Cardiology