Subscribe to: Heart Care Info RSS Feed  

Heart Care Info - Heart Disease Prevention & Treatment

  Heart health     Cardiopathy     Heart study     Cardiology      Email A Friend  
Heart disease
Heart attack
Heart failure
Heart surgery
Heart Care Info
Heart transplantation
Bypass surgery
Cardiovascular disease
Arrhythmia
Atherosclerosis
Heart rate
Cardiac arrest
Cardiac death
Cardiac surgery
Cardiovascular system
Cardiomyopathy
Endocarditis
Cardiomegaly
Myocarditis


Effects of Interval Cycle Training With or Without Strength Training on Vascular Reactivity in Heart Failure Patients, heart failure

Effects of Interval Cycle Training With or Without Strength Training on Vascular Reactivity in Heart Failure Patients


Heart Care Guide - http://www.heartcareguide.net

V Anagnostakou, K Chatzimichail... - Journal of Cardiac ..., 2011 - Elsevier Background Exercise training confers beneficial effects on vascular reactivity in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF). This randomized study compares the effects of interval cycle training combined with strength training versus interval training alone on vascular ...

Twenty-eight consecutive stable CHF patients (23 males, 53 10 years, 28.4 4.1 kg/m2, left ventricular ejection fraction of 37 12%) were randomly assigned to 3 times weekly training sessions for 3 months, consisting of a) 40 minutes of interval cycle training (n = 14), versus b) 20 minutes of similar interval training plus 20 minutes of strength training of the quadriceps, hamstrings, muscles of the shoulder and biceps brachialis (n = 14). The work/recovery ratio of each session was 30/60 seconds. The intensity of interval training was set at 50% of the peak workload achieved at the steep ramp test (consisted of a 25-Watt increase on a cycle ergometer every 10 seconds until exhaustion). All patients underwent maximal, symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise testing and ultrasound evaluation of vascular reactivity by flow-mediated vasodilation (FMD) before and after the program.

A significant improvement in FMD was observed in the combined training group (P = 0.002), in contrast to the interval training alone group (P = NS); the improvement was significantly greater in the combined training than in the interval training alone group (P < .05). Peak oxygen uptake increased significantly and similarly in both groups, in the interval training group (P = .03), and in the combined training group (P = .006). No significant correlation was found between FMD improvement and cardiopulmonary exercise parameters.

More Details:

Effects of Interval Cycle Training With or Without Strength Training on Vascular Reactivity in Heart Failure Patients
Cardiovascular health
Cardiovascular surgery
Coronary artery disease
Coronary artery bypass graft

Subscribe to Heart Care Info by Email
Your email address:

Heart Care Guide
Life & Health Center
Find Doctor in Town
Health Care Jobs
Heart disease treatment