Exercise intolerance in heart failure is a multifactorial condition resulting from impaired cardiac reserve, aging, pulmonary dysfunction, and skeletal muscle abnormalities.
Patients with heart failure
Exercise intolerance in heart failure is a multifactorial symptom driven by both cardiac and extra-cardiac multisystem dysfunctions.
Exercise intolerance is the cardinal symptom of heart failure (HF) and is of crucial relevance, because it is associated with a poor quality of life and increased mortality. While impaired cardiac reserve is considered to be central in HF, reduced exercise and functional capacity are the result of key patient characteristics and multisystem dysfunction, including aging, impaired pulmonary reserve, as well as peripheral and respiratory skeletal muscle dysfunction. We herein review the different modalities to quantify exercise intolerance, the pathophysiology of HF, and comorbid conditions as they lead to reductions in exercise and functional capacity, highlighting the fact that distinct causes may coexist and variably contribute to exercise intolerance in patients with HF.
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Marco Giuseppe Del Buono
Heart Failure & Transplant
Ross Arena
Pennington Biomedical Research Center
Barry A. Borlaug
University of Vermont
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Mayo Clinic
University of Illinois Chicago
University of Milan
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Buono et al. (Mon,) conducted a review in Heart failure. Exercise intolerance in heart failure is a multifactorial condition resulting from impaired cardiac reserve, aging, pulmonary dysfunction, and skeletal muscle abnormalities.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a05e7e367524563d62543d0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2019.01.072