Increased arteriovenous oxygen difference after physical training in coronary heart disease

A preliminary study of 12 male patients (mean age, 47.8 years) with coronary heart disease (six with angina pectoris and six with prior myocardial infarction but without angina) was conducted according to a common protocol in Seattle, Washington, and Louvain, Belgium. Maximal oxygen intake (V o o2 m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Circulation (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 1971-07, Vol.44 (1), p.109-118
Hauptverfasser: Detry, J M, Rousseau, M, Vandenbroucke, G, Kusumi, F, Brasseur, L A, Bruce, R A
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container_end_page 118
container_issue 1
container_start_page 109
container_title Circulation (New York, N.Y.)
container_volume 44
creator Detry, J M
Rousseau, M
Vandenbroucke, G
Kusumi, F
Brasseur, L A
Bruce, R A
description A preliminary study of 12 male patients (mean age, 47.8 years) with coronary heart disease (six with angina pectoris and six with prior myocardial infarction but without angina) was conducted according to a common protocol in Seattle, Washington, and Louvain, Belgium. Maximal oxygen intake (V o o2 max) and hemodynamic studies at rest and at two or three levels of submaximal exercise in the upright position were obtained before and after a 3-month physical training program that involved three sessions of 45 min/week. "V o o2 max" increased 22.5% ( P < 0.0001) with physical training. Changes in maximal heart rate occurred in the patients with angina (+8.4%) but not in those without angina (+0.8%). At rest and at each submaximal exercise, heart rate, mean blood pressure, and cardiac output decreased after training, whereas stroke volume was unchanged and arterio-mixed venous oxygen (A-V o o2 ) difference increased. The pressure-rate product and the left ventricular work decreased after training. The classic posttraining bradycardia was compensated not by a higher stroke volume but by an increased A-V o o2 difference which resulted from both a higher arterial oxygen content and an increased peripheral oxygen extraction. The latter was more apparent when exercises of the same relative intensity were compared. Thus, benefits with physical training in coronary patients result at submaximal exercise level from enhanced arterial oxygen content and peripheral extraction and secondarily from lower hemodynamic stress on ischemic myocardium. Increased maximal A-V o o2 difference probably explains most of the increase in "V o o2 max" with physical training in coronary patients not limited by angina pectoris.
doi_str_mv 10.1161/01.cir.44.1.109
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Maximal oxygen intake (V o o2 max) and hemodynamic studies at rest and at two or three levels of submaximal exercise in the upright position were obtained before and after a 3-month physical training program that involved three sessions of 45 min/week. "V o o2 max" increased 22.5% ( P &lt; 0.0001) with physical training. Changes in maximal heart rate occurred in the patients with angina (+8.4%) but not in those without angina (+0.8%). At rest and at each submaximal exercise, heart rate, mean blood pressure, and cardiac output decreased after training, whereas stroke volume was unchanged and arterio-mixed venous oxygen (A-V o o2 ) difference increased. The pressure-rate product and the left ventricular work decreased after training. The classic posttraining bradycardia was compensated not by a higher stroke volume but by an increased A-V o o2 difference which resulted from both a higher arterial oxygen content and an increased peripheral oxygen extraction. The latter was more apparent when exercises of the same relative intensity were compared. Thus, benefits with physical training in coronary patients result at submaximal exercise level from enhanced arterial oxygen content and peripheral extraction and secondarily from lower hemodynamic stress on ischemic myocardium. 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Maximal oxygen intake (V o o2 max) and hemodynamic studies at rest and at two or three levels of submaximal exercise in the upright position were obtained before and after a 3-month physical training program that involved three sessions of 45 min/week. "V o o2 max" increased 22.5% ( P &lt; 0.0001) with physical training. Changes in maximal heart rate occurred in the patients with angina (+8.4%) but not in those without angina (+0.8%). At rest and at each submaximal exercise, heart rate, mean blood pressure, and cardiac output decreased after training, whereas stroke volume was unchanged and arterio-mixed venous oxygen (A-V o o2 ) difference increased. The pressure-rate product and the left ventricular work decreased after training. The classic posttraining bradycardia was compensated not by a higher stroke volume but by an increased A-V o o2 difference which resulted from both a higher arterial oxygen content and an increased peripheral oxygen extraction. The latter was more apparent when exercises of the same relative intensity were compared. Thus, benefits with physical training in coronary patients result at submaximal exercise level from enhanced arterial oxygen content and peripheral extraction and secondarily from lower hemodynamic stress on ischemic myocardium. 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Maximal oxygen intake (V o o2 max) and hemodynamic studies at rest and at two or three levels of submaximal exercise in the upright position were obtained before and after a 3-month physical training program that involved three sessions of 45 min/week. "V o o2 max" increased 22.5% ( P &lt; 0.0001) with physical training. Changes in maximal heart rate occurred in the patients with angina (+8.4%) but not in those without angina (+0.8%). At rest and at each submaximal exercise, heart rate, mean blood pressure, and cardiac output decreased after training, whereas stroke volume was unchanged and arterio-mixed venous oxygen (A-V o o2 ) difference increased. The pressure-rate product and the left ventricular work decreased after training. The classic posttraining bradycardia was compensated not by a higher stroke volume but by an increased A-V o o2 difference which resulted from both a higher arterial oxygen content and an increased peripheral oxygen extraction. The latter was more apparent when exercises of the same relative intensity were compared. Thus, benefits with physical training in coronary patients result at submaximal exercise level from enhanced arterial oxygen content and peripheral extraction and secondarily from lower hemodynamic stress on ischemic myocardium. Increased maximal A-V o o2 difference probably explains most of the increase in "V o o2 max" with physical training in coronary patients not limited by angina pectoris.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pmid>5561413</pmid><doi>10.1161/01.cir.44.1.109</doi><tpages>10</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; American Heart Association; Journals@Ovid Complete; EZB Electronic Journals Library
subjects Adult
Aged
Angina Pectoris - blood
Angina Pectoris - physiopathology
Angina Pectoris - rehabilitation
Arteries
Belgium
Cardiac Output
Exercise Therapy
Heart Rate
Humans
International Cooperation
Male
Middle Aged
Myocardial Infarction - blood
Myocardial Infarction - physiopathology
Myocardial Infarction - rehabilitation
Oxygen - blood
Oxygen Consumption
Physical Education and Training
Respiration
Veins
Washington
title Increased arteriovenous oxygen difference after physical training in coronary heart disease
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