Cardiac adaptation to endurance exercise in rats


Autoria(s): Fenning, A.; Harrison, G.; Dwyer, D.; Rose'Meyer, R.; Brown, L.
Data(s)

01/09/2003

Resumo

Endurance exercise is widely assumed to improve cardiac function in humans. This project has determined cardiac function following endurance exercise for 6 (n = 30) or 12 ( n = 25) weeks in male Wistar rats (8 weeks old). The exercise protocol was 30 min/day at 0.8 km/h for 5 days/week with an endurance test on the 6th day by running at 1.2 km/h until exhaustion. Exercise endurance increased by 318% after 6 weeks and 609% after 12 weeks. Heart weight/kg body weight increased by 10.2% after 6 weeks and 24.1% after 12 weeks. Echocardiography after 12 weeks showed increases in left ventricular internal diameter in diastole (6.39 +/- 0.32 to 7.90 +/- 0.17 mm), systolic volume (49 +/- 7 to 83 +/- 11 mul) and cardiac output (75 +/- 3 to 107 +/- 8 ml/min) but not left wall thickness in diastole (1.74 +/- 0.07 to 1.80 +/- 0.06 mm). Isolated Langendorff hearts from trained rats displayed decreased left ventricular myocardial stiffness (22 +/- 1.1 to 19.1 +/- 0.3) and reduced purine efflux during pacing-induced workload increases. P-31-NMR spectroscopy in isolated hearts from trained rats showed decreased PCr and PCr/ATP ratios with increased creatine, AMP and ADP concentrations. Thus, this endurance exercise protocol resulted in physiological hypertrophy while maintaining or improving cardiac function.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:67141

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Kluwer Academic Publications

Palavras-Chave #Cell Biology #Physiological Hypertrophy #Rat #Endurance Exercise #Myocardial Energy Metabolism #Left-ventricular Hypertrophy #Quality-of-life #Heart-failure #Resonance Spectroscopy #Gene-expression #Nitric-oxide #Disease #Hypertension #Sensitivity #Metabolism #C1 #320502 Basic Pharmacology #730106 Cardiovascular system and diseases
Tipo

Journal Article