Ventilatory Efficiency Is Reduced in People With Hypertension During Exercise

Author:

Hope Katrina1ORCID,Chant Ben1,Hinton Thomas1,Kendrick Adrian H.12,Nightingale Angus K.13ORCID,Paton Julian F. R.4,Hart Emma C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bristol Heart Institute CardioNomics Research Group, School of Physiology, Pharmacology and Neuroscience, Biomedical Sciences University of Bristol Bristol United Kingdom

2. Department of Respiratory Medicine University Hospitals Bristol National Health Service Foundation Trust Bristol United Kingdom

3. Department of Cardiology Bristol Heart Institute, University Hospitals Bristol National Health Service Foundation Trust Bristol United Kingdom

4. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences The University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

Abstract

Background An elevated ventilatory efficiency slope during exercise (minute ventilation/volume of expired CO 2 ; V E /VCO 2 slope) is a strong prognostic indicator in heart failure. It is elevated in people with heart failure with preserved ejection, many of whom have hypertension. However, whether the V E /VCO 2 slope is also elevated in people with primary hypertension versus normotensive individuals is unknown. We hypothesize that there is a spectrum of ventilatory inefficiency in cardiovascular disease, reflecting an increasingly abnormal physiological response to exercise. The aim of this study was to evaluate the V E /VCO 2 slope in patients with hypertension compared with age‐, peak oxygen consumption–, and sex‐matched healthy subjects. Methods and Results Ramped cardiovascular pulmonary exercise tests to peak oxygen consumption were completed on a bike ergometer in 55 patients with primary hypertension and 24 normotensive controls. The V E /VCO 2 slope was assessed from the onset of exercise to peak oxygen consumption. Data were compared using unpaired Student t test. Age (mean±SD, 66±6 versus 64±6 years; P =0.18), body mass index (25.4±3.5 versus 24±2.4 kg/m 2 ; P =0.13), and peak oxygen consumption (23.2±6.6 versus 24±7.3 mL/min per kg; P =0.64) were similar between groups. The V E /VCO 2 slope was elevated in the hypertensive group versus controls (31.8±4.5 versus 28.4±3.4; P =0.002). Only 27% of the hypertensive group were classified as having a normal V E /VCO 2 slope (20–30) versus 71% in the control group. Conclusions Ventilatory efficiency is impaired people with hypertension without a diagnosis of heart failure versus normotensive individuals. Future research needs to establish whether those patients with hypertension with elevated V E /VCO 2 slopes are at risk of developing future heart failure.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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