학술논문

Post-Exercise Neurovascular Control in Chronic Heart Failure Patients.
Document Type
Academic Journal
Author
Nobre TS; Heart Institute (InCor), Medical School of University of Sao Paulo, Cardiovascular Rehabilitation and Exercise Physiology Unit, Sao Paulo, Brazil.; Groehs RV; Heart Institute (InCor), Medical School of University of Sao Paulo, Cardiovascular Rehabilitation and Exercise Physiology Unit, Sao Paulo, Brazil.; Azevedo LF; Heart Institute (InCor), Medical School of University of Sao Paulo, Cardiovascular Rehabilitation and Exercise Physiology Unit, Sao Paulo, Brazil.; Antunes-Correa LM; Heart Institute (InCor), Medical School of University of Sao Paulo, Cardiovascular Rehabilitation and Exercise Physiology Unit, Sao Paulo, Brazil.; Martinez DG; Unit of Cardiovascular Investigation and Exercise Physiology,Faculty of Physical Education, Federal University of Juiz de Fora, Minas Gerais, Brazil.; Alves MJ; Heart Institute (InCor), Medical School of University of Sao Paulo, Cardiovascular Rehabilitation and Exercise Physiology Unit, Sao Paulo, Brazil.; Negrao CE; Heart Institute (InCor), Medical School of University of Sao Paulo, Cardiovascular Rehabilitation and Exercise Physiology Unit, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Source
Publisher: Thieme Country of Publication: Germany NLM ID: 8008349 Publication Model: Print-Electronic Cited Medium: Internet ISSN: 1439-3964 (Electronic) Linking ISSN: 01724622 NLM ISO Abbreviation: Int J Sports Med Subsets: MEDLINE
Subject
Language
English
Abstract
It remains unknown whether or not a reduction in muscle sympathetic nerve activity in heart failure patients is associated over time with the effects of long- or short-term repeated exercise. 10 chronic heart failure patients, age 49±3 years old, functional class I-III NYHA, ejection fraction <40% were randomly submitted to either an acute bout of moderate continuous exercise OR high-intensity interval exercise. Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (microneurography) and forearm blood flow (venous occlusion plethysmography) were evaluated pre- and post-exercise sessions. The moderate exercise consisted of cycle exercise at an intensity corresponding to anaerobic threshold. The interval exercise consisted of a 2-min cycle exercise at intensity corresponding to anaerobic threshold, followed by a 1-min exercise set at respiratory compensation point. Exercise capacity was evaluated by cardiopulmonary exercise test. The caloric expenditure in both sessions was 100 kcal. Baseline muscle sympathetic nerve activity and forearm blood flow levels were not different between sessions. Moderate or high-intensity exercise caused no significant changes in muscle sympathetic nerve activity and forearm blood flow. These findings suggest that the reduction in muscle sympathetic nerve activity and the increase in forearm blood flow provoked by exercise training in chronic heart failure patients are due to cumulative effects over time.
(© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)