Heart rate reactivity, recovery, and endurance of the incremental shuttle walk test in patients prone to heart failure

Author:

Wei Fang‐Fei12,Mariottoni Beatrice3,An De‐Wei24,Pellicori Pierpaolo5,Yu Yu‐Ling26,Verdonschot Job A. J.7,Liu Chen1,Ahmed Fozia Z.8,Petutschnigg Johannes9,Rossignol Patrick10,Heymans Stephane7,Cuthbert Joe11,Girerd Nicolas10,Li Yan4,Clark Andrew L.11,Nawrot Tim S.612,Ferreira João Pedro1314,Zannad Faiez10,Cleland John G. F.5,Staessen Jan A.2415ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology The First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat‐Sen University Guangzhou China

2. Non‐Profit Research Association Alliance for the Promotion of Preventive Medicine (APPREMED) Mechelen Belgium

3. Department of Cardiology Cortona Hospital Arezzo Italy

4. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Shanghai Key Laboratory of Hypertension, Shanghai Institute of Hypertension, State Key Laboratory of Medical Genomics, National Research Centre for Translational Medicine Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine Shanghai China

5. British Heart Foundation Centre of Research Excellence, School of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Health University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

6. Research Unit Environment and Health, KU Leuven Department of Public Health and Primary Care University of Leuven Leuven Belgium

7. Department of Cardiology Maastricht University Medical Centre Maastricht The Netherlands

8. Division of Cardiovascular Sciences, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre University of Manchester Manchester UK

9. Department of Internal Medicine and Cardiology Campus Virchow Klinikum, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Berlin Institute of Health and German Center for Cardiovascular Research, Partner Site Berlin Berlin Germany

10. Université de Lorraine, Inserm, Centre d'Investigation Clinique Plurithématique 1433, U1116, CHRU de Nancy, F‐CRIN INI‐CRCT Nancy France

11. Department of Cardiology Castle Hill Hospital, University of Hull Cottingham UK

12. Centre for Environmental Sciences Hasselt University Hasselt Belgium

13. Department of Physiology and Cardiothoracic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine University of Porto Porto Portugal

14. Portugal Heart Failure Clinics, Department of Internal Medicine Centro Hospitalar de Vila Nova de Gaia/Espinho Vila Nova de Gaia Portugal

15. Biomedical Science Group University of Leuven Leuven Belgium

Abstract

AbstractAimsFew randomized trials assessed the changes over time in the chronotropic heart rate (HR) reactivity (CHR), HR recovery (HRR) and exercise endurance (EE) in response to the incremental shuttle walk test (ISWT). We addressed this issue by analysing the open HOMAGE (Heart OMics in Aging) trial.MethodsIn HOMAGE, 527 patients prone to heart failure were randomized to usual treatment with or without spironolactone (25–50 mg/day). The current sub‐study included 113 controls and 114 patients assigned spironolactone (~70% on beta‐blockers), who all completed the ISWT at baseline and at Months 1 and 9. Within‐group changes over time (follow‐up minus baseline) and between‐group differences at each time point (spironolactone minus control) were analysed by repeated measures ANOVA, unadjusted or adjusted for sex, age and body mass index, and additionally for baseline for testing 1 and 9 month data.ResultsIrrespective of randomization, the resting HR and CHR did not change from baseline to follow‐up, with the exception of a small decrease in the HR immediately post‐exercise (−3.11 b.p.m.) in controls at Month 9. In within‐group analyses, HR decline over the 5 min post‐exercise followed a slightly lower course at the 1 month visit in controls and at the 9 month visits in both groups, but not at the 1 month visit in the spironolactone group. Compared with baseline, EE increased by two to three shuttles at Months 1 and 9 in the spironolactone group but remained unchanged in the control group. In the between‐group analyses, irrespective of adjustment, there were no HR differences at any time point from rest up to 5 min post‐exercise or in EE. Subgroup analyses by sex or categorized by the medians of age, left ventricular ejection fraction or glomerular filtration rate were confirmatory. Combining baseline and Months 1 and 9 data in both treatment groups, the resting HR, CHR and HRR at 1 and 5 min averaged 61.5, 20.0, 9.07 and 13.8 b.p.m. and EE 48.3 shuttles.ConclusionsSpironolactone on top of usual treatment compared with usual treatment alone did not change resting HR, CHR, HRR and EE in response to ISWT. Beta‐blockade might have concealed the effects of spironolactone. The current findings demonstrate that the ISWT, already used in a wide variety of pathological conditions, is a practical instrument to measure symptom‐limited exercise capacity in patients prone to developing heart failure because of coronary heart disease.

Funder

Seventh Framework Programme

Omron Healthcare

Publisher

Wiley

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