Kronenberg M W, Konstam M A, Edens T R, Howe D M, Dolan N, Udelson J E, Benedict C, Stewart D, Yusuf S
Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
J Card Fail. 1998 Sep;4(3):159-67. doi: 10.1016/s1071-9164(98)80002-x.
The determinants of exercise performance are multifactorial and incompletely understood in patients with symptomatic left ventricular (LV) dysfunction, with much less information regarding asymptomatic LV dysfunction. This study assessed the hemodynamics and neurohormonal factors influencing exercise performance in patients with LV ejection fractions > or =0.35, both symptomatic and asymptomatic, enrolled in Studies of LV Dysfunction.
We studied 103 patients enrolled prospectively in Studies of LV Dysfunction before randomized therapy; 38 were symptomatic and 65 had no or minimal symptoms. By using rest-exercise gated equilibrium radionuclide ventriculography and cuff blood pressure, we assessed the heart rate, LV and right ventricular (RV) volumes and ejection fractions, total peripheral resistance, the LV peak systolic pressure/end systolic volume ratio as an index of contractility, and plasma renin and norepinephrine at rest and during maximal graded supine bicycle ergometer exercise. Changes between rest and exercise were evaluated as indices of cardiovascular reserve. The cumulative workload ranged from 120 to 2,100 watt-min. At rest, the LV ejection fraction was 0.30 in asymptomatic patients and 0.25 in symptomatic patients, respectively (P < .0004). During exercise, asymptomatic patients had greater increases in heart rate, systolic blood pressure, LV ejection fraction, and cardiac output than symptomatic patients (P > or = .05). Combining all patients, the strongest univariate correlates of exercise workload were the ability to increase heart rate (r = 0.70), the pressure/volume ratio (r = 0.63), and systolic blood pressure (r = 0.55), and to decrease the total peripheral resistance (r = -0.47) with moderate correlations for the ability to increase LV and RV ejection fractions (r = 0.33 and 0.35, respectively) (P < .0008). By multivariate analysis, workload was modeled best by the changes in four factors: heart rate, systolic blood pressure, and the LV and RV ejection fractions (R2 = 0.54, P < .001).
Exercise performance and its hemodynamics differed in patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic LV dysfunction. Rather than features at rest, the reserve capacities for increasing heart rate, systolic blood pressure, and the LV and RV ejection fractions were the predominant cardiac mechanisms related to greater exercise performance.
运动能力的决定因素是多方面的,对于有症状的左心室(LV)功能障碍患者,这些因素尚未完全明确,而关于无症状LV功能障碍患者的相关信息则更少。本研究评估了左室射血分数≥0.35的有症状和无症状LV功能障碍患者在参加LV功能障碍研究时影响运动能力的血流动力学和神经激素因素。
我们前瞻性地研究了103例在随机治疗前参加LV功能障碍研究的患者;其中38例有症状,65例无或仅有轻微症状。通过静息-运动门控平衡放射性核素心室造影和袖带血压测量,我们评估了心率、左室和右室(RV)容积及射血分数、总外周阻力、左室收缩压峰值/收缩末期容积比值作为收缩性指标,以及静息和最大分级仰卧位自行车测力计运动期间的血浆肾素和去甲肾上腺素水平。静息和运动之间的变化被评估为心血管储备指标。累积工作量范围为120至2100瓦·分钟。静息时,无症状患者的左室射血分数为0.30,有症状患者为0.25(P<0.0004)。运动期间,无症状患者的心率、收缩压、左室射血分数和心输出量的增加幅度大于有症状患者(P≥0.05)。综合所有患者,运动工作量最强的单变量相关因素是心率增加能力(r = 0.70)、压力/容积比值(r = 0.63)和收缩压(r = 0.55),以及总外周阻力降低能力(r = -0.47),左室和右室射血分数增加能力的相关性中等(分别为r = 0.33和0.35)(P<0.0008)。通过多变量分析,工作量由四个因素的变化最佳建模:心率、收缩压以及左室和右室射血分数(R2 = 0.54,P<0.001)。
有症状和无症状LV功能障碍患者的运动能力及其血流动力学存在差异。与更高运动能力相关的主要心脏机制不是静息特征,而是心率、收缩压以及左室和右室射血分数增加的储备能力。