Randomized trial of progressive resistance training to counteract the myopathy of chronic heart failure

Author:

Pu Charles T.123,Johnson Meredith T.13,Forman Daniel E.34,Hausdorff Jeffrey M.5,Roubenoff Ronenn1,Foldvari Mona1,Fielding Roger A.16,Singh Maria A. Fiatarone137

Affiliation:

1. Nutrition, Exercise Physiology, and Sarcopenia Laboratory, Jean Mayer United States Department of Agriculture, Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging, Tufts University, Boston 02111;

2. Brockton West Roxbury Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Division on Aging, Harvard Medical School, Boston 02132;

3. Hebrew Rehabilitation Center for Aged, Division on Aging, Harvard Medical School, Boston 02131;

4. Department of Cardiology, Boston University, and

5. Gerontology Division, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02215; and

6. Department of Health Sciences, Sargeant College of Health Rehabilitation Sciences, and

7. School of Exercise and Sport Science, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia 2141

Abstract

Chronic heart failure (CHF) is characterized by a skeletal muscle myopathy not optimally addressed by current treatment paradigms or aerobic exercise. Sixteen older women with CHF were compared with 80 age-matched peers without CHF and randomized to progressive resistance training or control stretching exercises for 10 wk. Women with CHF had significantly lower muscle strength ( P < 0.0001) but comparable aerobic capacity to women without CHF. Exercise training was well tolerated and resulted in no changes in resting cardiac indexes in CHF patients. Strength improved by an average of 43.4 ± 8.8% in resistance trainers vs. −1.7 ± 2.8% in controls ( P = 0.001), muscle endurance by 299 ± 66% vs. 1 ± 3% ( P = 0.001), and 6-min walk distance by 49 ± 14 m (13%) vs. −3 ± 19 m (−3%) ( P = 0.03). Increases in type I fiber area (9.5 ± 16%) and citrate synthase activity (35 ± 21%) in skeletal muscle were independently predictive of improved 6-min walk distance ( r 2 = 0.78; P = 0.0024). High-intensity progressive resistance training improves impaired skeletal muscle characteristics and overall exercise performance in older women with CHF. These gains are largely explained by skeletal muscle and not resting cardiac adaptations.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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