The present study was designed to clarify the characteristics of left ventricu lar hemodynamics and coronary arteries in patients with coronary artery dis ease presenting false-negative response to the Master's two-step stress test.
Eighty-eight consecutive patients performed the Master's two-step stress test and had coronary angiography for evaluation of suspected or known coronary artery disease. The frequency of false-negative and true-positive responses in the Master's two-step stress test was 20% and 45%, respectively. Elevated left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, reduced ejection fraction, and low cardiac output characterized the left ventricular hemodynamics in patients with false- negative responses, as compared with those with true-positive response. The severity and extent of coronary artery disease, as well as prior myocardial in farction, did not affect the frequency of false-negative response.
This study indicates that the false-negative response to the Master's two-step test is unexpectedly frequent in coronary artery disease with severe left ventric ular dysfunction. Thus, one should be careful in judging the results of the Mas ter's two-step test in symptomatic patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction.