Can strenuous exercise harm the heart? Insights from a study of cardiovascular neural regulation in amateur triathletes
Autor
Dalla Vecchia, Laura Adelaide
Barbic, Franca
De María, Beatrice
Cozzolino, Domenico
Gatti, Roberto
Dipaola, Franca
Brunetta, Enrico
Zamunér, Antonio
Porta, Alberto
Furlan, Raffaello
Fecha
2019Resumen
Regular exercise is recommended to improve the cardiovascular risk profile. However, there is growing evidence that extreme volumes and intensity of long-term exertion may increase the risk of acute cardiac events. The aim of this study is to investigate the aftereffects of regular, strenuous physical training on the cardiovascular neural regulation in a group of amateur triathletes compared to age-matched sedentary controls. We enrolled 11 non-elite triathletes (4 women, age 24±4 years), who had refrained from exercise for 72 hours, and 11 age-matched healthy non-athletes (3 women, age 25±2 years). Comprehensive echocardiographic and cardiopulmonary exercise tests were performed at baseline. Electrocardiogram, non-invasive blood pressure, respiratory activity, and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) were continuously recorded in a supine position (REST) and during an incremental 15˚ step-wise head-up tilt test up to 75˚ (TILT). Blood samples were
collected for determination of stress mediators. Autoregressive spectral analysis provided the indices of the cardiac sympathetic (LFRR) and vagal (HFRR) activity, the vascular sympathetic control (LFSAP), and the cardiac sympatho-vagal modulation (LF/HF). Compared to controls, triathletes were characterized by greater LFRR, LF/HF ratio, LFSAP, MSNA, and
lower HFRR at REST and during TILT, i.e. greater overall cardiovascular sympathetic modulation together with lower cardiac vagal activity. Cortisol and adrenocorticotropic hormone concentrations were also higher in triathletes. In conclusion, triathletes were characterized by signs of sustained cardiovascular sympathetic overactivity. This might represent a risk
factor for future cardiovascular events, given the known association between chronic excessive sympathetic activity and increased cardiovascular risk.
Fuente
Plos One, 14(5), e0216567Link de Acceso
Click aquí para ver el documentoIdentificador DOI
doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216567Colecciones
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