How does graded exercise affect the power spectrum of heart rate fluctuations in normal subjects compared to patients with severe congestive heart failure or cardiac transplantation?
43 normal subjects without known cardiac disease, 8 patients with severe congestive heart failure, and 6 patients status-post cardiac transplantation
Graded-work load exercise on a cycle ergometer
Baseline (before exercise) and recovery periods, and comparison between normal subjects and patients with heart disease
Power spectrum of heart rate and respiratory fluctuationssurrogate
The study demonstrates a marked reduction of autonomic modulation of heart rate in patients with heart failure and after cardiac transplant, and supports progressive withdrawal of vagal activity during exercise in normal subjects.
Fluctuations in heart rate above 0.03 Hz reflect autonomic modulation of sinoatrial node activity. To assess the dynamics of autonomic nervous activity during and immediately after exercise, we determined the power spectrum of heart rate and respiratory fluctuations in 43 normal subjects without known cardiac disease, 8 patients with severe congestive heart failure, and 6 patients status-post cardiac transplantation before, during, and after graded-work load exercise on a cycle ergometer. Before exercise, heart rate fluctuations (spectral power) at both high (0.15-0.80 Hz) and low (0.03-0.15 Hz) frequencies were significantly higher in normal subjects than in either heart failure or transplant patients but were not different between the two groups with heart disease. During exercise, heart rate power at all frequencies rapidly and progressively decreased in normal subjects, until at peak exercise it was not different from the other two groups. During recovery, heart rate power increased in normal subjects but remained significantly below base line. The findings demonstrate a marked reduction of autonomic modulation of heart rate in patients with heart failure and after cardiac transplant and support a progressive withdrawal of vagal activity during exercise with a gradual increase during recovery in normal subjects.
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Yasuyuki Arai
Kyoto University
J. Philip Saul
Pediatric Cardiology
Paul Albrecht
Boston University
AJP Heart and Circulatory Physiology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
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Arai et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d943bb3e67f8d13868409a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.1989.256.1.h132