Does a 30-year interval of aging affect body composition and cardiovascular response to acute exercise in healthy men?
A 30-year interval of aging in healthy men led to an 11% decline in cardiovascular capacity primarily due to impaired peripheral oxygen extraction, an effect less profound than 3 weeks of bedrest at age 20.
Background — Cardiovascular capacity declines with aging, as evidenced by declining maximal oxygen uptake (V̇ o 2 max ), with little known about the specific mechanisms of this decline. Our study objective was to assess the effect of a 30-year interval on body composition and cardiovascular response to acute exercise in 5 healthy subjects originally evaluated in 1966. Methods and Results — Anthropometric parameters and the cardiovascular response to acute maximal exercise were assessed with noninvasive techniques. On average, body weight increased 25% (77 versus 100 kg) and percent body fat increased 100% (14% versus 28%), with little change in fat-free mass (66 versus 72 kg). On average, V̇ o 2 max decreased 11% (3.30 versus 2.90 L/min). Likewise, V̇ o 2 max decreased when indexed to total body mass (43 versus 31 mL · kg −1 · min −1 ) or fat-free mass (50 versus 43 mL/kg fat-free mass per minute). Maximal heart rate declined 6% (193 versus 181 bpm) and maximal stroke volume increased 16% (104 versus 121 mL), with no difference observed in maximal cardiac output (20.0 versus 21.4 L/min). Maximal AV oxygen difference declined 15% (16.2 versus 13.8 vol%) and accounted for the entire decrease in cardiovascular capacity. Conclusions — Cardiovascular capacity declined over the 30-year study interval in these 5 middle-aged men primarily because of an impaired efficiency of maximal peripheral oxygen extraction. Maximal cardiac output was maintained with a decline in maximal heart rate compensated for by an increased maximal stroke volume. Most notably, 3 weeks of bedrest in these same men at 20 years of age (1966) had a more profound impact on physical work capacity than did 3 decades of aging.
McGuire et al. (Tue,) studied this question.