缺血性心脏病运动降低心率反应:运动试验中目标心率的谬误。

Medicine and science in sports Pub Date : 1979-01-01
A C Powles, J R Sutton, J R Wicks, N B Oldridge, N L Jones
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引用次数: 0

摘要

当对159例既往心肌梗死患者进行运动测试时,我们确定了39例因疲劳而受限的患者。这组都是窦性心律;没有人服用可能损害心脏变时反应的药物;没有出现胸痛或缺血性心电图改变。在该组中,有18人的最大运动心率比年龄预测值低2SD或更多,与其他21人的最大运动心率在年龄预测值的2SD以内相比,他们对运动的心率反应有所降低。在迷走神经阻滞前后,研究了8名运动心率降低的受试者的亚组。在4例脑梗死较差的受试者中,迷走神经阻断后心率反应的降低更为深刻且持续,提示起搏器反应降低可能是由于缺血或脑梗死所致,也可能是自主神经失衡所致。所有8例患者在高功率输出时通气呈线性增加,运动后平均血乳酸为7.5 mM/I,未出现迷走神经阻滞。我们的研究结果表明,运动导致的心率降低可能会增加冠状动脉风险,这可以从病因和预后角度进行细分。在这些患者中使用“目标心率”没有安全边际,如果从次最大心率反应推断,最大运动能力将被严重高估。心血管对运动的限制可以通过通气的线性增加来检测。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reduced heart rate response to exercise in ischemic heart disease: the fallacy of the target heart rate in exercise testing.

When exercise testing 159 patients with prior myocardial infarction, we identified 39 who were limited by fatigue. This group was all in sinus rhythm; none were taking drugs likely to impair the chronotropic response of the heart; none experienced chest pain or developed ischemic ECG changes. In 18 of this group, maximal heart rate achieved with exercise was 2SD or more below the age predicted value, and their heart rate response to exercise was reduced compared to that of the other 21 whose maximal exercise heart rates were within 2SD of age predicted values. A subgroup of 8 subjects with reduced exercise heart rates was studied before and after vagal blockade. In the 4 subjects whose infarction was inferior, the reduction in heart rate response was more profound and persisted after vagal blockade, suggesting either reduced pacemaker responsivness, due to ischemia or infarction, or autonomic imbalance as possible mechanisms. All 8 showed alinear increases in ventilation at higher power outputs and mean blood lactate postexercise was 7.5 mM/I without vagal blockade. Our findings suggest that a reduced heart rate response to exercise, already shown to imply added coronary risk, may be subdivided aetiologically and possibly prognostically. The use of a "Target Heart Rate" in such patients offers no safety margin, and maximal exercise capacity will be grossly over-estimated if extrapolated from the submaximal heart rate response. A cardiovascular limitation to exercise may be detected by an alinear increase in ventilation.

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