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(Chest. 1998;113:612-618.)
© 1998 American College of Chest Physicians

Interpretive Algorithms for the Symptom-Limited Exercise Test

Assessing Dyspnea in Persian Gulf War Veterans

Ann E. Medinger MD, FCCP1; Tet W. Chan MD1; Aram Arabian MD1; and Prashant K. Rohatgi MD, FCCP1

1 From the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Washington VAMC and George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC

Interpretation of symptom-limited exercise testing requires analysis of a large body of simultaneously recorded cardiopulmonary data. Karlman Wasserman has recommended an algorithmic approach to interpretation (WA) that leads to a dichotomous choice between pulmonary and cardiovascular impairment. An alternative algorithm published by William Eschenbacher (EA) provides for concurrent assessment of cardiovascular and pulmonary exercise impairment. We analyzed a group of 29 individuals referred to the Pulmonary Physiology Laboratory at the Washington Veterans Affairs Medical Center for evaluation of dyspnea following service in the Persian Gulf War to assess the concordance of the two algorithms in determining the cause of dyspnea and exercise impairment in these individuals. They each performed a progressive, ramped, symptom-limited exercise test on a bike for a minimum of 6 min. Exercise measurements were analyzed by both interpretive algorithms. Concordance was found in 28% of tests. The greatest discordance occurred in identifying pulmonary limitation. Eleven had pulmonary limitation by EA; of these, WA found 1 to have pulmonary limitation, 5 to be normal, 4 indeterminate, and 1 musculoskeletal limitation. Of the 11 with pulmonary limitation by EA, but not by WA, 5 had abnormal resting pulmonary function measurements. Analysis of the differences between these two interpretive approaches is given. The EA algorithm may be more sensitive for detecting exercise impairment of pulmonary origin, but its specificity remains to be determined.

Key Words: clinical exercise testing • dyspnea assessment • Persian Gulf War syndrome

Submitted on June 6, 1997
Accepted on August 13, 1000







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