Literature DB >> 16234900

Aging and heart failure--similar syndromes of exercise intolerance? Implications for exercise-based interventions.

Stephan Gielen1, Volker Adams, Josef Niebauer, Gerhard Schuler, Rainer Hambrecht.   

Abstract

A classic hallmark of chronic heart failure (CHF) is exercise intolerance; however, the extent of exercise limitation is not correlated with the degree of left ventricular dysfunction. Over the past 2 decades it has become more and more evident that peripheral factors, such as skeletal muscle dysfunction, ventilatory abnormalities, and endothelial dysfunction, contribute the greater part to the limitation of exercise capacity. The molecular and pathophysiological changes observed in these organ systems are not always specific to the underlying CHF but rather represent a common pathway that is activated in several chronic disease processes, including severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cancer, and in the normal aging process. A major contributing factor for skeletal muscle catabolism (i.e. elevated cytokine expression in the skeletal muscle) can be found in both normal healthy aging and in heart failure patients. It is reasonable to assume that the overlap of aging and CHF-associated changes in the skeletal muscle partially explains the disabling consequences of the CHF syndrome among elderly patients (nearly 80% of all patients hospitalized for CHF are >65 years old). Peripheral alterations in CHF are often not adequately treated in routine clinical care since standard pharmacological therapy is still focused on the cardiac function and neurohormonal alteration. Exercise training is a guideline-oriented adjuvant therapy with well-documented beneficial effects on exercise tolerance, skeletal muscle function, endothelial function, and respiration. In this review, the effects of exercise in aging and in CHF are compared and the parallel mechanisms are explored.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16234900

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Heart Fail Monit        ISSN: 1470-8590


  4 in total

Review 1.  Muscle oxygen transport and utilization in heart failure: implications for exercise (in)tolerance.

Authors:  David C Poole; Daniel M Hirai; Steven W Copp; Timothy I Musch
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2011-11-18       Impact factor: 4.733

2.  Exercise training reduces fibrosis and matrix metalloproteinase dysregulation in the aging rat heart.

Authors:  Hyo-Bum Kwak; Jong-hee Kim; Kumar Joshi; Alvin Yeh; Daniel A Martinez; John M Lawler
Journal:  FASEB J       Date:  2010-12-08       Impact factor: 5.191

3.  Muscle-derived extracellular superoxide dismutase inhibits endothelial activation and protects against multiple organ dysfunction syndrome in mice.

Authors:  Jarrod A Call; Jean Donet; Kyle S Martin; Ashish K Sharma; Xiaobin Chen; Jiuzhi Zhang; Jie Cai; Carolina A Galarreta; Mitsuharu Okutsu; Zhongmin Du; Vitor A Lira; Mei Zhang; Borna Mehrad; Brian H Annex; Alexander L Klibanov; Russell P Bowler; Victor E Laubach; Shayn M Peirce; Zhen Yan
Journal:  Free Radic Biol Med       Date:  2017-10-02       Impact factor: 7.376

4.  Analysis of skeletal muscle gene expression patterns and the impact of functional capacity in patients with systolic heart failure.

Authors:  Daniel E Forman; Karla M Daniels; Lawrence P Cahalin; Alexandra Zavin; Kelly Allsup; Peirang Cao; Mahalakshmi Santhanam; Jacob Joseph; Ross Arena; Antonio Lazzari; P Christian Schulze; Stewart H Lecker
Journal:  J Card Fail       Date:  2014-04-02       Impact factor: 5.712

  4 in total

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