Exercise training-induced bradycardia: evidence for enhanced parasympathetic regulation without changes in intrinsic sinoatrial node function.
نویسندگان
چکیده
The mechanisms responsible for exercise-induced reductions in baseline heart rate (HR), known as training bradycardia, remain controversial. Therefore, changes in cardiac autonomic regulation and intrinsic sinoatrial nodal (SAN) rate were evaluated using dogs randomly assigned to either a 10- to 12-wk exercise training (Ex, n = 15) or an equivalent sedentary period (Sed, n = 10). Intrinsic HR was revealed by combined autonomic nervous system (ANS) blockade (propranolol + atropine, iv) before and after completion of the study. At the end of the study, SAN function was further evaluated by examining the SAN recovery time (SNRT) following rapid atrial pacing and the response to adenosine in anesthetized animals. As expected, both the response to submaximal exercise and baseline HR significantly (P < 0.01) decreased, and heart rate variability (HRV; e.g., high-frequency R-R interval variability) significantly (P < 0.01) increased in the Ex group but did not change in the Sed group. Atropine also induced significantly (P < 0.01) greater reductions in HRV in the Ex group compared with the Sed group; propranolol elicited similar HR and HRV changes in both groups. In contrast, neither intrinsic HR (Ex before, 141.2 ± 6.7; Ex after, 146.0 ± 8.0 vs. Sed before, 143.3 ± 11.1; Sed after, 141.0 ± 11.3 beats per minute), the response to adenosine, corrected SNRT, nor atrial fibrosis and atrial fibrillation inducibility differed in the Ex group vs. the Sed group. These data suggest that in a large-animal model, training bradycardia results from an enhanced cardiac parasympathetic regulation and not from changes in intrinsic properties of the SAN.
منابع مشابه
Counterpoint: Exercise training-induced bradycardia: the case for enhanced parasympathetic regulation.
TRAINING BRADYCARDIA is a well-established consequence of endurance exercise training and is, in fact, often used to demonstrate that an exercise training program had been effective (3). Despite decades of research, the mechanisms responsible for this reduction in baseline heart rate (HR) remain controversial (7, 9, 10, 13). Exercise training-induced changes in HR could result from either shift...
متن کاملAthlete's bradycardia may be a multifactorial mechanism.
TO THE EDITOR: Boyett et al. (1) provides interesting evidences, arguing that endurance training-induced bradycardia seems mostly related to a remodeling of the sinoatrial node. However, we would like to add four complementary elements to extend this paper. About intrinsic heart rate. In Boyett et al.’s Table 1, seven studies explored long-time endurance athletes and three studies explored subj...
متن کاملPoint: Exercise training-induced bradycardia is caused by changes in intrinsic sinus node function.
in intrinsic sinus node function 5 6 7 Mark R. Boyett, Yanwen Wang, Shu Nakao, Jonathan Ariyaratnam, George Hart, 8 Oliver Monfredi and Alicia D’Souza 9 10 11 Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Manchester, UK 12 13 14 Corresponding author: Professor Mark Boyett, Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Manchester, 15 46 Grafton Street, Manchester M13 9NT, UK 16 Phone: +44-161-2751192 Email: m...
متن کاملRebuttal from Billman on Point:Counterpoint: Exercise training-induced bradycardia.
BOYETT AND COWORKERs (4) identified three potential weaknesses with the autonomic neural hypothesis: 1) the contribution of changes in heart rate (HR) to heart rate variability (HRV), 2) the HR response to atropine, and 3) training effects in cardiac transplant patients. The authors note that due to the inverse curvilinear relationship between HR and R-R interval (9), changes in HR per se can a...
متن کاملCrossTalk opposing view: Bradycardia in the trained athlete is attributable to a downregulation of a pacemaker channel in the sinus node
It should not be ignored that our interpreting the HF power in the heart frequency spectrum as indicating an increase in cardiac parasympathetic activity was only one part of our argument. There are three points we now wish to further emphasise. One is that blocking the If pacemaker current and slowing heart rate does not change the power of the HF component in humans as we previously cited and...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of applied physiology
دوره 118 11 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2015