Low-level exercise training delays heart failure and extends patient's lives, even those with hypertension
BETHESDA, Md. (Dec. 6,
2005) - A classic clinical dilemma faces doctors treating patients with
congestive heart failure (CHF): while exercise generally protects the
normal heart from cardiovascular disease, will exercise potentially
"improve the prognosis of patents with CHF, or (will it place) a
further excessive demand on an already over-stressed myocardium"?
That's how a new research
paper poses the question, and its positive but still tentative results
show: "Briefly we found that low intensity exercise training markedly
delayed the onset of overt CHF without a reduction in antecedent
hypertension. Additionally, we found that some, but not all, of the
classic cellular and systemic physiological alterations normally
associated with the development of overt CHF were attenuated with
exercise training."
It's not an idle issue. The
American Heart Association (AHA) 2005 Statistics Update reports that 65
million Americans have high blood pressure (hypertension) and nearly 5
million are suffering from CHF, where the chances of survival drop
rapidly, as about 75% of patients die within 8 years after diagnosis.
"The key findings in this
study," according to laboratory director Russell L. Moore, "are that
(1) exercise can delay the onset of decompensated heart failure and
improve survivability and (2) this effect is strongly dependent on the
level of intensity of the exercise. You can push the level over the
edge quickly," he added. "Not that long ago, clinicians were afraid to
even suggest a little exercise in patients with CHF. However, our
study, along with several human studies, shows a definite trend
indicating that moderate intensity exercise has a potential role in
stemming the downward spiral in heart failure," Moore said.
The paper, "Low-intensity
exercise training delays the onset of decompensated heart failure in
the spontaneously hypertensive heart failure (SHHF) rat," appears in
the November edition of the American Journal of Physiology-Heart and
Circulatory Physiology, published by the American Physiological
Society. Research was Craig A. Emter, Sylvia A. McCune, Genevieve C.
Sparagna, and Russell L. Moore at the University of Colorado at
Boulder, and M. Judith Radin at Ohio State University.
Exercise could delay use of drug interventions, improve quality of life
Moore noted that the
experiment was performed "on an animal model of CHF that shares many
striking similarities to human CHF and we found that low-intensity
exercise works in a way that is consistent with preliminary human
results. Using exercise early in the disease might leave more expensive
options like drug therapies until later, thus avoiding their inevitable
side-effects. At the same time, it's likely that even low-level
exercise has the additional potential of an improved life style."
Moore said the human
equivalent of the exercise in the experiments would be a "brisk, but
not taxing, walk." The paper noted that "our results underscore the
importance of using low intensity exercise at a 'tolerable intensity'.
(The) final training intensity was quite low as evidenced by the
absence of a training-induced increase in skeletal muscle citrate
synthase activity or body weight loss."
Model studies show decisive protection due to exercise, danger of over-exertion
The experiment involved
three sedentary control groups (9 months, 15 months and 22 months of
age) and two groups of rats that "trained" for six months; one group
starting training at 9 months of age, the other at 16 months of age.
The subjects were spontaneously hypertensive heart failure (SHHF) rats.
True lean male SHHF rats develop hypertension at 3-4 months and
spontaneously develop terminal overt CHF at 18-23 months, 100% of the
time. The onset of hypertension preceding CHF in this model is
particularly important because 75% of human CHF cases have antecedent
hypertension, the 2005 AHA Update reports.
The exercise training
started at 9 and 16 months of age, consisting of treadmill running
three days a week, 45 minutes a day for six months. During the first
month of training, the speed was increased from 10 meters/minute to
17.5 m/min. However three rats in the 9-month group experienced sudden
death, though no animals in the 16-month group were adversely affected
by the higher speed. Following the deaths of the younger rats, the
speed was reduced to 14 m/min, and no further deaths occurred.
After six months of
training, when the two oldest groups were 22 months of age, nine rats
in the oldest sedentary group were near death in severe, end-stage
decompensated heart failure (one had already died) and the experiment
was terminated to allow for improved tissue analysis and comparison.
Exercise improved survivability (p < 0.01) since all (nine) rats
that started training at 16 months of age were still alive.
Exercise delays or suppresses many physiological changes associated with CHF
In addition to the delayed
onset of CHF and increased mortality, the exercise regimen "prevented
or suppressed alterations in myosin heavy chain isoform expression,
cardiac cell morphology, proteinuria, plasma ANP, and body composition
that normally occur with the development of overt heart failure," the
paper reported. "Furthermore, the model of exercise training and heart
failure described in this work may ultimately be of value in dissecting
out the specific cellular and molecular processes that are influenced
by training and that are required for improved survival in a setting of
developing heart failure," the paper concluded.
Next steps
Moore said the experimental
results "are only the beginning" in trying to understand "how the heart
interprets the exercise stimulus and what mechanisms are responsible
for protecting the heart from going into heart failure." Moore outlined
the following areas of interest:
* Determining mitochondrial
function and preservation of aerobic energy metabolism, which is one
theory behind the downward spiral to heart failure.
* When does heart failure
start, at what point can exercise have the most effect and at what
point does exercise become non- or counter-productive in CHF?
* The current study involved males, but what are the effects of low-intensity exercise on females?
* What could the impact on
longevity be of different exercise regimens? The current study was
stopped somewhat arbitrarily to allow good comparative tissue analysis
when all the sedentary rats were dead or near death. Studying the
long-term effects of exercise potentially could lead to other avenues
of inquiry.
###
Source and funding
The paper, "Low-intensity
exercise training delays the onset of decompensated heart failure in
the spontaneously hypertensive heart failure (SHHF) rat," appears in
the November edition of the American Journal of Physiology-Heart and
Circulatory Physiology, published by the American Physiological
Society. Research was Craig A. Emter, Sylvia A. McCune, Genevieve C.
Sparagna, and Russell L. Moore at the Department of Integrative
Physiology, University of Colorado at Boulder, and M. Judith Radin at
the Department of Veterinary Biosciences, Ohio State University,
Columbus.
Research was supported by
NIH/National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (Moore) and American
Heart Association Pacific Mountain Affiliate (Sparagna and McCune).
Editor's note: The media may obtain a copy of Emter et al. by
contacting Mayer Resnick, at the American Physiological Society,
301.634.7209, cell 301.332.4402 or mresnick@the-aps.org.
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