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Journal Article

Citation

Kavanagh T, Matosevic V, Thacker L, Belliard R, Shephard RJ. J. Cardiopulm. Rehabil. 1998; 18(3): 209-215.

Affiliation

Toronto Rehabilitation Centre, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9632322

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Bus drivers with ischemic heart disease have been denied normal employment, although they satisfy Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) Guidelines. To show the safety of their reemployment, we compared their responses when driving buses with those seen during graded exercise testing. METHODS: Twenty-two male city bus drivers, aged 48.1 +/- 5.6 years (19 had a myocardial infarction, 2 had coronary artery bypass graft, 1 had documented ischemic heart disease) were referred for work evaluation. After a CCS cardiopulmonary exercise test, they were accompanied by a physician and a therapist/technician on a normal shift. Note was kept of symptoms, signs, electrocardiogram (telemetry), blood pressure (ambulatory recording unit), and Borg rating of effort throughout. RESULTS: Average values for peak heart rate (101 +/- 12.5 versus 148.2 +/- 17.2 beats/min), peak systolic pressure (150.0 +/- 20.8 versus 198.9 +/- 25.7 mm Hg), peak rate-pressure product (15,259 +/- 3,369 versus 29,500 +/- 5,283 units), peak Borg RPE (9.9 +/- 1.4 versus 17.4 +/- 3.0 units), and peak ST-segmental depression (-0.03 +/- 0.07 versus -0.07 +/- 0.09 mV) during the shift were only about a half of average values reached during the graded stress test. Moreover, peak values were reached at the end of the shift, when carrying the loaded fare box, rather than when driving. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiovascular strain during bus driving is much less than during the CCS stress test for drivers. Using CCS methodology, the risk that a sudden cardiovascular incident will cause injury or death of others in the first year after recovery from myocardial infarction is estimated at 1 in 50,000 driver-years. Thus, those satisfying CCS requirements can return to full driving duties promptly, with minimal risk to themselves, passengers, or other road users.


Language: en

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