Literature DB >> 12186798

Exercise-induced increase in baroreflex sensitivity predicts improved prognosis after myocardial infarction.

Maria Teresa La Rovere1, Chiara Bersano, Marco Gnemmi, Giuseppe Specchia, Peter J Schwartz.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite the rational expectation for a survival benefit produced by exercise training among post-myocardial infarction (MI) patients, direct evidence remains elusive. Clinically, changes in autonomic balance toward lower vagal activity have consistently been associated with increased mortality risk; conversely, among both control and post-MI dogs, exercise training improved vagal reflexes and prevented sudden death. Accordingly, we tested the hypothesis that exercise training, if accompanied by a shift toward increased vagal activity of an autonomic marker such as baroreflex sensitivity (BRS), could reduce mortality in post-MI patients. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Ninety-five consecutive male patients surviving a first uncomplicated MI were randomly assigned to a 4-week endurance training period or to no training. Age (51+/-8 versus 52+/-8 years), site of MI (anterior 41% versus 43%), left ventricular ejection fraction (52+/-13 versus 51+/-14%), and BRS (7.9+/-5.4 versus 7.9+/-3.4 ms/mm Hg) did not differ between the two groups. After 4 weeks, BRS improved by 26% (P=0.04) in trained patients, whereas it did not change in nontrained patients. During a 10-year follow-up, cardiac mortality among the 16 trained patients who had an exercise-induced increase in BRS >or = 3 ms/mm Hg (responders) was strikingly lower compared with that of the trained patients without such a BRS increase (nonresponders) and that of the nontrained patients (0 of 16 versus 18 of 79 [23%], P=0.04). Cardiac mortality was also lower among responders irrespective of training (4% versus 24%, P=0.04).
CONCLUSIONS: Post-MI exercise training can favorably modify long-term survival, provided that it is associated with a clear shift of the autonomic balance toward an increase in vagal activity.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12186798     DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.0000027565.12764.e1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


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