Left ventricular response to isometric exercise in patients with denervated and innervated hearts.

Author:

Savin W M,Alderman E L,Haskell W L,Schroeder J S,Ingels N B,Daughters G T,Stinson E B

Abstract

Patients with cardiac denervation resulting from allograft transplantation have been observed to increase their diastolic and systolic blood pressure during isometric exercise without concomitant cardioacceleration. To determine the mechanism for the blood pressure increase, heart rate, blood pressure, and ventricular volumes (measured using fluoroscopy of tantalum midwall myocardial markers) were recorded before and after a 50% maximal voluntary contraction. Seven cardiac transplant recipients (denervated heart) and seven nontransplant patients (innervated heart) were studied. Innervated and denervated heart patients increased systolic blood pressure by 16% and 21% and total peripheral resistance by 20% and 12%, respectively. The percentage responses were not significantly different between groups, except for heart rate, which increased 17% in innervated heart patients and 2% in denervated heart patients (p less than 0.05). Neither group had enhanced contractility or increases in cardiac output, suggesting that the blood pressure increases resulted in both groups from increased peripheral resistance.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Reference17 articles.

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2. Longhurst JC Mitchell JH: Reflex control of the circulation by afferents from skeletal muscle. In International Review of Physiology: Cardiovascular Physiology III edited by Guyton AC Young DB. Baltimore University Park Press 1979 pp 125-148

3. The effect of exercise and atrial pacing on left ventricular volume and contractility in patients with innervated and denervated hearts.

4. The use of single plane angiocardiograms for the calculation of left ventricular volume in man

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