Literature DB >> 12718481

Impaired chronotropic response to exercise in acute myocardial infarction patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Kazuhiro Izawa1, Kazuhiko Tanabe, Kazuto Omiya, Sumio Yamada, Yasuhiro Yokoyama, Tomoyasu Ishiguro, Maiko Yagi, Yasuyuki Hirano, Yusuke Kasahara, Naohiko Osada, Fumihiko Miyake, Masahiro Murayama.   

Abstract

This study was undertaken in acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (type 2 DM) to investigate their impaired chronotropic response to exercise. Seventy-one AMI subjects entered the study, 30 with type 2 DM and 41 age- and body mass index-matched non-DM (control) patients. One month after the onset of AMI, these patients underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing on a treadmill under a ramp protocol. Anaerobic threshold (AT) and peak oxygen uptake (peak VO2) were determined as indicators of exercise capacity. Plasma norepinephrine (NE) concentration was measured in blood samples obtained at 2 time points: during pre-exercise rest and immediately after peak exercise. The change in NE concentration during exercise, as an index of sympathetic nervous activity, was calculated as a percentage: deltaNE = [(NE during exercise) - (resting value)]/(resting value) x 100. The change in heart rate (HR) during exercise was calculated as a simple difference: deltaHR = [(peak HR) - (rest HR)]. Index of chronotropic response to exercise was then quantified as the deltaHR/deltaNE during exercise. No significant intergroup differences in ejection fraction at rest or HR at peak exercise were observed. However, VO2 at AT, peak VO2, deltaHR, and deltaHR/deltaNE were significantly lower in the type 2 DM group than in the non-DM group. DeltaHR correlated with VO2 at AT (r = 0.49, P<0.001) and with peak VO2 (r = 0.53, P<0.001) in all subjects. Also, deltaHR/deltaNE correlated with VO2 at AT (r = 0.42, P<0.001) and with peak VO2 (r = 0.44, P<0.001) in all subjects. AMI patients with type 2 DM had impaired cardiopulmonary responses to maximal and submaximal exercise testing and impaired chronotropic response to exercise, even though their cardiac function at rest was similar to that of non-DM AMI patients. The data suggest that one mechanism of impaired cardiopulmonary response to exercise in AMI patients with type 2 DM groups is an impaired chronotropic response.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12718481     DOI: 10.1536/jhj.44.187

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Jpn Heart J        ISSN: 0021-4868


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