Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis (Drs Anand, Garg, and Pritzker); Division of Cardiology, Lehigh Valley Health Network, Allentown, Pennsylvania (Dr Garg); and Department of Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern, Dallas (Dr Bano).
J Cardiopulm Rehabil Prev. 2018 Nov;38(6):358-365. doi: 10.1097/HCR.0000000000000353.
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is associated with subclinical abnormalities in left ventricular function and an increased downstream risk for heart failure. Exercise training has been associated with significant improvement in cardiorespiratory fitness among these patients. However, its impact on cardiac function is not well established.
We conducted a meta-analysis including all randomized and nonrandomized trials that evaluated effects of exercise training on cardiac function among patients with T2D. Primary outcomes were measures of left ventricular systolic (global longitudinal strain) and diastolic (early diastolic velocity [é]) function. The effects of exercise training on peak oxygen uptake; other markers of diastolic dysfunction: mitral peak early-to-late diastolic filling velocity (E/A), mitral inflow to annular ratio (E/é), and deceleration time (DT); and systolic velocity were also assessed.
Our study included 441 patients enrolled in 6 trials. Exercise training significantly improved early diastolic velocity (standardized mean difference [SMD], 0.58; 95% CI, 0.09-1.07), global longitudinal strain (SMD, 0.62; 95% CI, 0.04-1.21), and peak oxygen uptake (SMD, 1.43; 95% CI, 0.51-2.35) as compared with control group. However, no significant changes were observed in other markers of diastolic function (E/A, E/é and DT) and systolic velocity.
Exercise training in patients with T2D is associated with a significant improvement in some echocardiographic indicators of systolic and diastolic function and cardiorespiratory fitness. These findings suggest that exercise training may improve subclinical systolic and diastolic dysfunction in patients at risk for clinical heart failure.
2 型糖尿病(T2D)与左心室功能的亚临床异常以及心力衰竭的下游风险增加有关。运动训练与这些患者的心肺适应能力的显著提高有关。然而,其对心脏功能的影响尚未得到很好的确立。
我们进行了一项荟萃分析,纳入了所有评估 T2D 患者运动训练对心脏功能影响的随机和非随机试验。主要结局指标是左心室收缩(整体纵向应变)和舒张(早期舒张速度[é])功能的测量值。还评估了运动训练对峰值摄氧量的影响;舒张功能障碍的其他标志物:二尖瓣峰值早期到晚期舒张充盈速度(E/A)、二尖瓣流入到环比值(E/é)和减速时间(DT);以及收缩速度。
我们的研究纳入了 6 项试验中的 441 名患者。与对照组相比,运动训练显著改善了早期舒张速度(标准化均数差 [SMD],0.58;95%CI,0.09-1.07)、整体纵向应变(SMD,0.62;95%CI,0.04-1.21)和峰值摄氧量(SMD,1.43;95%CI,0.51-2.35)。然而,其他舒张功能标志物(E/A、E/é 和 DT)和收缩速度没有观察到显著变化。
T2D 患者的运动训练与一些超声心动图收缩和舒张功能以及心肺适应能力的指标显著改善有关。这些发现表明,运动训练可能改善有临床心力衰竭风险的患者亚临床收缩和舒张功能障碍。