A cardiac stress test can help healthcare providers identify certain
heart conditions.What is a stress test?
A stress test is a very commonly performed test to learn:
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How well your heart pumps blood.
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Whether your heart is receiving an adequate blood supply.
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How you perform on physical activity (riding a treadmill or
stationary bike) compared with other people your age and sex.
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If your symptoms (chest discomfort, shortness of breath, feeling
like your heart is racing or even dizziness) can be reproduced
while performing physical activity.
This makes it easier to identify and evaluate certain heart issues,
such as:
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Issues with your muscle or valves.
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Adequate blood supply to your heart muscle.
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Electric stability of your heart at rest and during exercise.
Cardiac stress tests help healthcare providers determine whether you
need additional — often more invasive — testing to confirm a
diagnosis or if treatment might lower your heart attack risk and
make you feel better.
How does a stress test work?
A heart stress test starts by making your heart pump harder and
faster. For many people, this includes walking on a treadmill or
riding a stationary bicycle. That’s why the test is often called an
exercise stress test.
Healthcare providers assess your response to the increased workload
by measuring:
Why might I need a stress test?
You may need this test to detect heart problems like:
People with high-risk occupations (like pilots or professional
athletes) may also need stress tests.
Who should have a cardiac stress test?
This test may be right for you if you have symptoms of heart
disease, like:
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Angina, which is chest pain or discomfort due to poor blood
flow to the heart.
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Arrhythmia, which is a rapid or irregular heartbeat.
- Shortness of breath (dyspnea).
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Feeling lightheaded or dizzy.
Stress tests are also for people with a heart disease diagnosis who:
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Would like to start exercising.
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Are undergoing treatment and healthcare providers need to
determine how well it’s working.
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Face a higher risk of complications due to a personal or family
history of heart disease.
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Have diabetes or
other underlying conditions that increase your risk of heart
disease.
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Require non-cardiac surgery and healthcare providers need to
assess your risk of complications.
Providers may also do stress tests in people without known heart
disease or symptoms to assess their risk for heart disease and heart
attacks, especially if they have other risk factors like diabetes,
high blood pressure, high cholesterol or a family history of
premature heart disease.
What are the different types of stress tests?
There are many methods for assessing heart function while it’s hard
at work. All cardiac stress tests involve checking your heart rate,
blood pressure, oxygen levels and electrical activity. But there are
some differences.
Stress test types include:
Exercise stress test
This is the most common and basic heart stress test. It involves
walking on a treadmill or riding a stationary bicycle. A
well-trained exercise physiologist usually tailors the speed and
elevation of the treadmill to your ability to walk and your overall
fitness.
If you can’t exercise, you receive medications that make your heart
pump harder and faster or dilate the artery supplying blood to your
heart (coronary arteries). An electrocardiogram
(EKG) captures your heart’s electrical activity. Exercise stress
tests check for signs of coronary artery disease.
Exercise stress echocardiogram
An exercise
stress echocardiogram is similar to the basic stress test but
provides more detail. Healthcare providers perform an echocardiogram
(ultrasound of your heart) before and at peak exercise. This cardiac
imaging test uses sound waves to evaluate blood flow through your
heart as well as the pumping chambers of your heart (muscle) and
valve functions.
You might need a stress echocardiogram if the results of your
initial stress test are unclear. This study enables healthcare
providers to observe blood flow through the heart’s chambers as well
as the effects of exercise.
Nuclear stress test
This advanced heart stress test uses safe levels of a radioactive
substance and a cardiac imaging scan to assess heart function. A
healthcare provider takes pictures of your heart before (at rest)
and after you exercise. A cardiologist compares the amount of blood
flow to the muscle of your heart at rest and after stress. A
decrease in blood flow signal usually indicates a blockage in one or
multiple arteries in your heart.
Nuclear cardiac stress tests can:
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Determine the severity of blockage of coronary artery disease.
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Assess whether previous treatments, such as stents or bypass
surgery are working as they should.
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Help you avoid more invasive heart tests, such as cardiac
catheterization.
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Show whether your heart is healthy enough for non-cardiac
surgery or exercise.
Cardiac rehabilitation stress test
If your healthcare provider recommends cardiac
rehabilitation, the program may include stress testing.
Rehabilitation is a medically supervised exercise program that helps
people with heart disease become more physically active.
Cardiac rehabilitation stress testing includes:
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Entrance stress test: Helps the rehabilitation team
develop an exercise program that’s appropriate for your
capabilities.
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Exit stress test: Enables the team to measure your
progress and create a long-term exercise program after you
complete rehabilitation.
Who should not have an exercise stress test?
Cardiac stress testing isn’t for everyone. You might not need the
test if you have:
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A coronary artery disease diagnosis, have undergone treatment
and not had new symptoms for years and are doing well on medical
therapy.
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No history of risk factors for coronary artery disease or
coronary disease or symptoms.
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A low risk of heart disease, including people who do not smoke,
are physically active and eat a heart-healthy diet.
The test is also not for people with heart conditions that make
stress testing unsafe (contraindications).
These include:
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Aortic dissection.
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Endocarditis, pericarditis or myocarditis (heart
muscle inflammation).
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Recent heart
attack.
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Severe aortic stenosis (aortic valve narrowing).
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Uncontrolled abnormal heart rhythm (arrhythmia).
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Ongoing chest pain.
Why is exercise stress test eligibility important?
Your healthcare provider may decide not to have you undergo stress
tests or repeat “routine” stress tests to help you avoid unnecessary
costs and treatments. An unindicated stress test may show results
that prompt healthcare providers to recommend additional testing you
don’t need. Some of these tests, including a coronary angiogram,
carry a higher risk of complications than stress tests.
Cardiologists consider your overall health in determining whether a
heart stress test is right for you.
This determination includes
your:
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Age.
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Family history of heart disease.
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Sex.
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Health history.
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Level of physical activity.
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Symptoms.
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Risk factors like smoking, diabetes, high blood pressure and
high cholesterol.
What’s important to know about exercise stress testing in women?
Females tend to experience heart disease differently than males.
This makes it challenging to detect early-stage heart disease. In
general, healthcare providers tailor their stress testing and method
of imaging during stress testing based on your sex and age to obtain
optimal results and minimize radiation and unclear test results.
Is cardiac stress testing safe?
If there are no contraindications, exercise stress tests are safe.
Very few people experience complications. Trained healthcare
providers, typically an exercise physiologist and a cardiologist,
are present during your test in the rare event that you have a
complication. They assess your performance, data and symptoms
throughout the tests and immediately provide emergency treatment if
it’s needed. You also have the option of stopping the stress test at
any time if you become anxious or uncomfortable.