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1.
To assess the reliability of conductance (G) catheter for evaluating right ventricular (RV) volume changes, a miniature (3.5F) six-electrode catheter was developed and tested in 11 New Zealand rabbit hearts. In five animals the heart was excised; in six it was left in the thorax. RV conductance was recorded while the RV was filled with blood in 0.25-ml steps at different left ventricular (LV) volumes. Linear correlation of measured conductance vs. reference volumes was computed. RV conductance was highly correlated with reference volume [correlation coefficient (r) ranging from 0.991 to 0.999]. Slope of regression lines was not significantly affected by LV volume variations in 1-ml steps or by acute conductance changes of structures surrounding the heart, whereas the intercept was affected only by the 0- to 1-ml LV volume change. In four rabbits, RV conductance changes during a cardiac cycle [stroke volume- (SV) G] were compared in vivo with electromagnetic flow probe-derived estimates of SV (SVem) as stroke volume was varied by graded inferior vena caval occlusion. SV-G correlated well with SVem (r ranging from 0.92 to 0.96). This correlation persisted after the thorax was filled with saline; however, significant differences were found in individual slopes (P < 0.001). These results show that the conductance catheter has a potential to reliably monitor in vivo relative RV volume changes in small-animal hearts.  相似文献   

2.
Pericardial constraint and ventricular interaction influence left ventricular (LV) performance when preload is high. However, it is unclear if these constraining forces modulate LV filling when the heart is unloaded, such as during upright posture, in humans. Fifty healthy individuals underwent right heart catheterization to measure pulmonary capillary wedge (PCWP) and right atrial pressure (RAP). To evaluate the effects of pericardial constraint on hemodynamics, transmural filling pressure (LVTMP) was defined as PCWP-RAP. Beat-to-beat blood pressure (BP) waveforms were recorded, and stroke volume (SV) was derived from the Modelflow method. After measurements at -30 mmHg lower body negative pressure (LBNP), which approximates the upright position, LBNP was released, and beat-to-beat measurements were performed for 15 heartbeats. At -30 mmHg LBNP, RAP and PCWP were significantly decreased. During the first six beats of LBNP release, heart rate (HR) was unchanged, while BP increased from the fourth beat. RAP increased faster than PCWP resulting in an acute decrease in LVTMP from the fourth beat. A corresponding drop in SV by 3% was observed with no change in pulse pressure. From the 7th to 15th beats, LVTMP and SV increased steadily, followed by a decreased HR due to the baroreflex. A decreased TMP, but not PCWP, caused a transient drop in SV with no changes in HR or pulse pressure during LBNP release. These results suggest that the pericardium constrains LV filling during LBNP release, enough to cause a small but significant drop of SV, even at low cardiac filling pressure in healthy humans.  相似文献   

3.
Subjects with greater aerobic fitness demonstrate better diastolic compliance at rest, but whether fitness modulates exercise cardiac compliance and cardiac filling pressures remains to be determined. On the basis of maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max), healthy male subjects were categorized into either low (LO: VO2max=43+/-6 ml.kg-1.min-1; n=3) or high (HI: VO2max=60+/-3 ml.kg-1.min-1; n=5) aerobic power. Subjects performed incremental cycle exercise to 90% Vo(2max). Right atrial (RAP) and pulmonary artery wedge (PAWP) pressures were measured, and left ventricular (LV) transmural filling pressure (TMFP=PAWP-RAP) was calculated. Cardiac output (CO) and stroke volume (SV) were determined by direct Fick, and LV end-diastolic volume (EDV) was estimated from echocardiographic fractional area change and Fick SV. There were no between-group differences for any measure at rest. At a submaximal workload of 150 W, PAWP and TMFP were higher (P<0.05) in LO compared with HI (12 vs. 8 mmHg, and 9 vs. 4 mmHg, respectively). At peak exercise, CO, SV, and EDV were lower in LO (P<0.05). RAP was not different at peak exercise, but PAWP (23 vs. 15 mmHg) and TMFP (12 vs. 6 mmHg) were higher in LO (P<0.05). Compared with less fit subjects, subjects with greater aerobic fitness demonstrated lower LV filling pressures during exercise, whereas SV and EDV were either similar (submaximal exercise) or higher (peak exercise), suggesting superior diastolic function and compliance.  相似文献   

4.
We studied the cardiovascular effects of phasic increases in intrathoracic pressure (ITP) by high-frequency jet ventilation in an acute pentobarbital-anesthetized intact canine model both before and after the induction of acute ventricular failure by large doses of propranolol. Chest and abdominal pneumatic binders were used to further increase ITP. Respiratory frequency, percent inspiratory time, mean ITP, and swings in ITP throughout the respiratory cycle were independently varied at a constant-circulating blood volume. We found that pertubations in mean ITP induced by ventilator adjustments accounted for all observable steady-state hemodynamic changes independent of respiratory frequency, inspiratory time, or phasic respiratory swings in ITP. Changes in ITP were associated with reciprocal changes in both intrathoracic vascular pressures (P less than 0.01) and blood volume (P less than 0.01). When cardiac function was normal, left ventricular (LV) stroke volume decreased, whereas in acute ventricular failure, LV stroke volume increased in response to increasing ITP when apneic LV filling pressure was high (greater than or equal to 17 Torr) and did not change if apneic LV filling pressure was low (less than or equal to 12 Torr). However, in all animals in acute ventricular failure, LV stroke work increased with increasing ITP. Our study demonstrates that the improved cardiac function seen with increasing ITP in acute ventricular failure is dependent upon adequate LV filling and decreased LV afterload in a manner analogous to that seen with arterial vasodilator therapy in heart failure.  相似文献   

5.
Changes in intrathoracic pressure (ITP) can influence cardiac performance by affecting ventricular loading conditions. Because both systemic venous return and factors determining left ventricular (LV) ejection may vary over the cardiac cycle, phasic increases in ITP may differentially affect preload or afterload if delivered at specific points within the cardiac cycle. We studied the hemodynamic effects of cardiac cycle-specific increases in ITP (pulses) delivered by a high-frequency jet ventilator in an acute closed-chested canine model (n = 11), using electromagnetic flow probes to measure biventricular stroke volume. Measurements were taken during a control condition after the induction of acute ventricular failure (AVF) by propranolol hydrochloride and volume infusion. ITP was independently varied without changing lung volume by the inflation of thoracoabdominal binders. Although synchronous pulses had minimal hemodynamic effects in unbound controls, binding pulses timed to occur in early diastole resulted in decreases in LV filling pressure and left ventricular stroke volume (SVlv) (P less than 0.05). In the AVF condition, pulses increased LV performance, evidenced by increases in SVlv (P less than 0.01), despite decreases in LV filling pressure (P less than 0.05). This effect is maximized by binding and by timing the pulses to occur in systole. We conclude that cardiac cycle-specific increases in ITP can significantly affect cardiac performance. These effects appear to be related to the ability of such timed pulses to selectively affect LV preload and afterload.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of this study was to investigate the contribution of direct right-to-left ventricular interaction to left ventricular filling and stroke volume in 46 patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and 18 control subjects. Stroke volume, right and left ventricular volumes, left ventricular filling rate, and interventricular septum curvature were measured by magnetic resonance imaging and left atrial filling by transesophageal echocardiography. Stroke volume, left ventricular end-diastolic volume, and left ventricular peak filling rate were decreased in PAH patients compared with control subjects: 28 +/- 13 vs. 41 +/- 10 ml/m(2) (P < 0.001), 46 +/- 14 vs. 61 +/- 14 ml/m(2) (P < 0.001), and 216 +/- 90 vs. 541 +/- 248 ml/s (P < 0.001), respectively. Among PAH patients, stroke volume did not correlate to right ventricular end-diastolic volume or mean pulmonary arterial pressure but did correlate to left ventricular end-diastolic volume (r = 0.62, P < 0.001). Leftward interventricular septum curvature was correlated to left ventricular filling rate (r = 0.64, P < 0.001) and left ventricular end-diastolic volume (r = 0.65, P < 0.001). In contrast, left atrial filling was normal and not correlated to left ventricular end-diastolic volume. In PAH patients, ventricular interaction mediated by the interventricular septum impairs left ventricular filling, contributing to decreased stroke volume.  相似文献   

7.
Research on the cardiovascular physiology of hibernating mammals may provide insight into evolutionary adaptations; however, anesthesia used to handle wild animals may affect the cardiovascular parameters of interest. To overcome these potential biases, we investigated the functional cardiac phenotype of the hibernating grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) during the active, transitional and hibernating phases over a 4 year period in conscious rather than anesthetized bears. The bears were captive born and serially studied from the age of 5 months to 4 years. Heart rate was significantly different from active (82.6 ± 7.7 beats/min) to hibernating states (17.8 ± 2.8 beats/min). There was no difference from the active to the hibernating state in diastolic and stroke volume parameters or in left atrial area. Left ventricular volume:mass was significantly increased during hibernation indicating decreased ventricular mass. Ejection fraction of the left ventricle was not different between active and hibernating states. In contrast, total left atrial emptying fraction was significantly reduced during hibernation (17.8 ± 2.8%) as compared to the active state (40.8 ± 1.9%). Reduced atrial chamber function was also supported by reduced atrial contraction blood flow velocities and atrial contraction ejection fraction during hibernation; 7.1 ± 2.8% as compared to 20.7 ± 3% during the active state. Changes in the diastolic cardiac filling cycle, especially atrial chamber contribution to ventricular filling, appear to be the most prominent macroscopic functional change during hibernation. Thus, we propose that these changes in atrial chamber function constitute a major adaptation during hibernation which allows the myocardium to conserve energy, avoid chamber dilation and remain healthy during a period of extremely low heart rates. These findings will aid in rational approaches to identifying underlying molecular mechanisms.  相似文献   

8.
The aim of our experiments was to study the thoracic electrical impedance method as a method for measuring cardiac output in anesthetized dogs. Four electrodes were placed around the neck and thorax. A 50 kHz, 1 mA electric current was applied to the outer two electrodes and the two inner electrodes were used to measure impedance changes related to the stroke volume during the cardiac cycle at end-expiratory apnea. The cardiac output obtained by the impedance method was compared to the cardiac output measured by isotope dilution and by the electromagnetic flowmeter. Either mean cardiac output or cardiac output determined beat-to-beat from the pulsatile flow was measured with the latter method. Significant correlations were obtained between the impedance and the isotope dilution method (r = 0.8799), and between the impedance and the electromagnetic (mean) flow measurements (r = 0.7330). The comparison of impedance cardiac output to that determined from the pulsatile flow (beat-to-beat) also showed a good correlation (r = 0.7618). The effect of changing the fluid and air contents in the chest on the basal thoracic impedance was also studied.  相似文献   

9.
Cardiac-related deflections in thoracic electrical impedance have been thought to correlate sufficiently well with cardiac stroke volume to be used as the basis for a noninvasive estimation of cardiac output. To determine more precisely the physiological origin of the impedance deflection (DZ), we regarded right ventricular stroke volume (SVa) as the sum of two components: 1) that part of SVa responsible for the transient increment in pulmonary blood volume within a cardiac cycle, SVa-v and 2) the remaining part of SVa, (SVa-SVa-v). SVa-v was measured in lambs by integration of the difference between pulmonary arterial and pulmonary venous flow. SVa and its components were varied experimentally by opening and closing an aorticocaval shunt or by inflating and deflating a cuff implanted around the pulmonary artery. DZ was measured using a tetrapolar disk electrode system. Multivariate linear regression analysis revealed that SVa-v had a significant positive effect on DZ, and, at the same time, (SVa-SVa-v) had a significant negative effect on DZ. In the pulmonary artery occluder model, the positive effect of SVa-v dominated the opposing negative effect of (SVa - SVa-v) so that the net effect of SVa on DZ was positive and significant. In the aorticocaval shunt model, these effects opposed each other to the extent that there was no significant correlation between SVa and DZ. These results shed new light on the physiological origin of DZ. They also demonstrate that use of DZ to measure acute changes in cardiac output may yield misleading results. Changes or the lack of changes in thoracic electrical impedance do not necessarily reflect cardiac output status.  相似文献   

10.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate right ventricular (RV) loading and cardiac output changes, by using the thermodilution technique, during the mechanical ventilatory cycle. Fifteen critically ill patients on mechanical ventilation, with 5 cmH(2)O of positive end-expiratory pressure, mean respiratory frequency of 18 breaths/min, and mean tidal volume of 708 ml, were studied with help of a rapid-response thermistor RV ejection fraction pulmonary artery catheter, allowing 5-ml room-temperature 5% isotonic dextrose thermodilution measurements of cardiac index (CI), stroke volume (SV) index, RV ejection fraction (RVEF), RV end-diastolic volume (RVEDV), and RV end-systolic volume (RVESV) indexes at 10% intervals of the mechanical ventilatory cycle. The ventilatory modulation of CI and RV volumes varied from patient to patient, and the interindividual variability was greater for the latter variables. Within patients also, RV volumes were modulated more by the ventilatory cycle than CI and SV index. Around a mean value of 3.95 +/- 1.18 l. min(-1). m(-2) (= 100%), CI varied from 87.3 +/- 5.2 (minimum) to 114.3 +/- 5.1% (maximum), and RVESV index varied between 61.5 +/- 17.8 and 149.3 +/- 34.1% of mean 55.1 +/- 17.9 ml/m(2) during the ventilatory cycle. The variations in the cycle exceeded the measurement error even though the latter was greater for RVEF and volumes than for CI and SV index. For mean values, there was an inspiratory decrease in RVEF and increase in RVESV, whereas a rise in RVEDV largely prevented a fall in SV index. We conclude that cyclic RV afterloading necessitates multiple thermodilution measurements equally spaced in the ventilatory cycle for reliable assessment of RV performance during mechanical ventilation of patients.  相似文献   

11.
During acute pulmonary hypertension, both the pericardium and the right ventricle (RV) constrain left ventricular (LV) filling; therefore, pericardiotomy should improve LV function. LV, RV, and pericardial pressures and RV and LV dimensions and LV stroke volume (SV) were measured in six anesthetized dogs. The pericardium was closed, the chest was left open, and the lungs were held away from the heart. Data were collected at baseline, during pulmonary artery constriction (PAC), and after pericardiotomy with PAC maintained. PAC decreased SV by one-half. RV diameter increased, and septum-to-LV free wall diameter and LV area (our index of LV end-diastolic volume) decreased. Compared with during PAC, pericardiotomy increased LV area and SV increased 35%. LV and RV compliance (pressure-dimension relations) and LV contractility (stroke work-LV area relations) were unchanged. Although series interaction accounts for much of the decreased cardiac output during acute pulmonary hypertension, pericardial constraint and leftward septal shift are also important. Pericardiotomy can improve LV function in the absence of other sources of external constraint to LV filling.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of this work was to investigate in the avascular heart of the frog Rana esculenta the influence of nitric oxide (NO) on ventricular systolic and diastolic functions by using a novel image analysis technique. The external volume variations of the whole ventricle were monitored during the heart cycle by video acquisition(visible light) and analysed by an appropriately developed software with a specific formula for irregular convex solids. The system, which measures the rate of volume changes and the ejection fraction, directly determined the volumetric behaviour of the working frog heart after stimulation or inhibition of NOS-NOcGMP pathway. End-diastolic volume (EDVext), end-systolic volume (ESVext), contraction and relaxation velocities (dV/dtsys and dV/dtdia, respectively), stroke volume (SV) and ejection fraction (EF), were measured before and after perfusion with NOS substrate (L-arginine), NO donor (SIN-1), cGMP analogue (8-Br-cGMP),NOS inhibitors (NG-monomethyl-L-arginine, L-NMMA; L-N(5)-(1-iminoethyl)-ornithine, L-NIO; 7-Nitroindazole,7-NI) and guanylyl cyclase inhibitor (ODQ). The results showed that NO reduces ventricular systolicfunction improving diastolic filling, while NOS inhibition increases contractility impairing ventricular filling capacity. The presence of activated eNOS (p-eNOS) was morphologically documented, further supporting that the mechanical activity of the ventricular pump in frog is influenced by a tonic release of NOS-generated NO.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The pressure difference between the cardinal sinus and the pericardium, and the transmural ventricular diastolic pressure at rest and during swimming in the leopard shark, Triakis semifasciata, was measured to characterize the mechanism of cardiac filling in chronically-instrumented fish and to evaluate cardiac responses to swimming. Echo-Doppler and radiographic imaging were also used to fully describe the cardiac cycle. Swimming induces an increase in preload as manifested by a large increment of cardinal sinus pressure (0.26/0.20 [systolic/diastolic] to 0.49/0.32 kPa) which always exceeds pericardial pressure. Increases in both mean ventricular diastolic transmural pressure (0.30–0.77 kPa) and cardinal sinus pressure during swimming suggest increased cardiac filling by vis a tergo as the mechanism for augmenting cardiac output. In contrast to mammals, the fluid-filled pericardial space of elasmobranchs is considerably larger and the pericardium itself does not move in concert with the heart throughout the cardiac cycle. Also, modest increases in heart rate drastically curtail the duration of diastole, which becomes much less than that of systole, a phenomenon not found in mammals. In the absence of tachycardia (<40 bpm), ventricular filling is characterized by a period of early rapid filling, and a late period of filling owing to atrial systole, separated by a period of diastasis. Ventricular filling in elasmobranchs is thus biphasic and is not solely dependent on atrial systole. Atrial diastole is characterized by three filling periods associated with atrial relaxation, ventricular ejection, and sinus venosus contraction. The estimated ventricular ejection fraction of Triakis (80%) exceeds that of the mammalian left ventricle.  相似文献   

14.
Left ventricular torsion is caused by shortening and relaxation of the helical fibres in the myocardium, and is thought to be an optimal configuration for minimizing myocardial tissue strains. Characteristics of torsional motion has also been proposed to be markers for cardiac dysfunction. However, its effects on fluid and energy dynamics in the left ventricle have not been comprehensively investigated. To investigate this, we performed image-based flow simulations on five healthy adult porcine and two healthy human foetal left ventricles (representing two different length scales) at different degrees of torsional motions. In the adult porcine ventricles, cardiac features such as papillary muscles and mitral valves, and cardiac conditions such as myocardial infarctions, were also included to investigate the effect of twist. The results showed that, for all conditions investigated, ventricular torsional motion caused minimal changes to flow patterns, and consistently accounted for less than 2% of the energy losses, wall shear stresses, and ejection momentum energy. In contrast, physiological characteristics such as chamber size, stroke volume and heart rate had a much greater influence on flow patterns and energy dynamics. The results thus suggested that it might not be necessary to model the torsional motion to study the flow and energy dynamics in left ventricles.  相似文献   

15.
The variations in ventricular-atrial mitral annular position during the cardiac cycle and the simultaneous changes in left atrial silhouette area (obtained by angiography after injections of contrast material into the main pulmonary artery) were investigated in six experiments on intact dogs with chronically implanted intracardiac markers. Frame-by-frame measurements of the angiograms (120 frames/s) were used to determine, under various hemodynamic conditions, the duration, magnitude, and average rate of the mitral annular motion and of the simultaneous changes in left atrial area during atrial filling (ventricular systole) and atrial emptying (early in ventricular diastole). The mitral annulus was seen to move towards the ventricular apex during systole and towards the atrium early in diastole with the duration, average rate, and magnitude of displacement (although varying widely) showing good statistical correlations (P less than 0.0005-0.005) with the changes in projected left atrial area. These findings suggest that the duration, rate, and magnitude of atrial filling and emptying may be, in the intact heart, determined by the movements of the atrioventricular junction.  相似文献   

16.
In 12 mechanically ventilated and anesthetized rabbits, we investigated whether the magnitude of respiratory changes in the aortic velocity time integral (VTI(Ao)), recorded by transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) during a stepwise blood withdrawal and restitution, could be used as a reliable indicator of volume depletion and responsiveness. At each step, left and right ventricular dimensions and the aortic diameter and VTI(Ao) were recorded to calculate stroke volume (SV) and cardiac output (CO). Respiratory changes of VTI(Ao) (maximal - minimal values divided by their respective means) were calculated. The amount of blood withdrawal correlated negatively with left and right ventricular diastolic diameters, VTI(Ao), SV, and CO and correlated directly with respiratory changes of VTI(Ao). Respiratory VTI(Ao) variations (but not other parameters) at the last blood withdrawal step was also correlated with changes in SV after blood restitution (r = 0.83, P < 0.001). In conclusion, respiratory variations in VTI(Ao) using TTE appear to be a sensitive index of blood volume depletion and restitution. This dynamic parameter predicted fluid responsiveness more reliably than static markers of cardiac preload.  相似文献   

17.
The pericardium may modulate acute compensatory changes in stroke volumes seen with sudden changes in cardiac volume, but such a mechanism has never been clearly demonstrated. In eight open-chest dogs, we measured left and right ventricular pressures, diameters, stroke volumes, and pericardial pressures during rapid (approximately 300 ms) systolic infusions or withdrawals of approximately 25 ml blood into and out of the left atrium and right atrium. Control beats, the infusion/withdrawal beat, and 4-10 subsequent beats were studied. With infusions, ipsilateral ventricular end-diastolic transmural pressure, diameter, and stroke volume increased. With the pericardium closed, there was a compensatory decrease in contralateral transmural pressure, diameter, and stroke volume, mediated by opposite changes in transmural end-diastolic pressures. The sum of the ipsilateral increase and contralateral decrease in stroke volume approximated the infused volume. Corresponding changes were seen with blood withdrawals. This direct ventricular interaction was diminished when pericardial pressure was <5 mmHg and absent when the pericardium was opened. Pericardial constraint appears essential for immediate biventricular compensatory responses to acute atrial volume changes.  相似文献   

18.
Using Doppler echocardiography and electrocardiography, we characterized cardiac hemodynamics, timing, and electromechanical function, and examined the effects of ventricular hypertrophy on systolic function in anesthetized rainbow trout. Atrial filling (D(SA)), ventricular filling (D(AV)), and ventricular ejection (D(VB)) accounted for 40-77, 13-27, and 22-41% of the cardiac cycle, respectively. Ventricular ejection occurred entirely during atrial filling and ended by the time the QT interval was 80% (SD=9%) completed. Sinoatrial (SA) flow was of longer duration (0.53+/-0.08 sec, mean+/-SD) and lower velocity (32+/-8 cm sec(-1)) than corresponding atrioventricular (AV, 0.19+/-0.02 sec; 87+/-8 cm sec(-1)) and ventriculobulbar (VB, 0.30+/-0.05 sec; 63+/-20 cm sec(-1)) values. Despite a wide range of heart masses, atrioventricular and VB valve dimensions were identical ( approximately 5.5 mm(2)). Ventricle mass (M(V)), but not relative ventricle mass (RVM), and cardiac cycle length were positively correlated (r(2)=0.57, P<0.001); thus, all time-dependent electrical/mechanical measures of cardiac function were significantly related to M(V), but not RVM. All rate-corrected (c) electromechanical event durations (except cD(SA)) and the systolic function index (cPEP (pre-ejection period)/D(VB)) were independent of RVM, suggesting the maintenance of cardiac functional capabilities across maturation stages (males) and different ventricle sizes (males and females). In summary, we define fundamental electrical and mechanical properties of the in vivo teleost myocardium under anesthesia, and report the maintenance of systolic function over a wide range of heart sizes for both sexes and maturation state of males. We also suggest that the short duration of ventricular emptying relative to the QT interval may provide a novel mechanism to adjust stroke volume and cardiac output in teleosts.  相似文献   

19.
During incremental exercise, stroke volume (SV) plateaus at 40-50% of maximal exercise capacity. In healthy individuals, left ventricular (LV) twist and untwisting ("LV twist mechanics") contribute to the generation of SV at rest, but whether the plateau in SV during incremental exercise is related to a blunting in LV twist mechanics remains unknown. To test this hypothesis, nine healthy young males performed continuous and discontinuous incremental supine cycling exercise up to 90% peak power in a randomized order. During both exercise protocols, end-diastolic volume (EDV), end-systolic volume (ESV), and SV reached a plateau at submaximal exercise intensities while heart rate increased continuously. Similar to LV volumes, two-dimensional speckle tracking-derived LV twist and untwisting velocity increased gradually from rest (all P < 0.001) and then leveled off at submaximal intensities. During continuous exercise, LV twist mechanics were linearly related to ESV, SV, heart rate, and cardiac output (all P < 0.01) while the relationship with EDV was exponential. In diastole, the increase in apical untwisting was significantly larger than that of basal untwisting (P < 0.01), emphasizing the importance of dynamic apical function. In conclusion, during incremental exercise, the plateau in LV twist mechanics and their close relationship with SV and cardiac output indicate a mechanical limitation in maximizing LV output during high exercise intensities. However, LV twist mechanics do not appear to be the sole factor limiting LV output, since EDV reaches its maximum before the plateau in LV twist mechanics, suggesting additional limitations in diastolic filling to the heart.  相似文献   

20.
Exercise-induced alterations in cardiac function during graded cycling with submaximal and maximal intensities were studied in 13 trained and 13 untrained young men. Stroke volume (SV) and stroke index (SI) at rest and during submaximal and maximal exercise, determined by impedance cardiography, were consistently greater in the trained than in the less fit group. Training-induced bradycardia was evident in the trained group at rest and during submaximal exercise. Even when SV and SI were compared at the same absolute heart rate and left ventricular ejection time, those for the trained group were markedly greater than those for the untrained. SV for the untrained group was relatively diminished above the work rate corresponding to the anaerobic threshold. The difference in SV during exercise may be attributed to inadequate filling due to the smaller stretch of myocardial fibers in diastole and/or lesser systolic emptying of the left ventricle due to the reduced myocardial contractility in systole of untrained individuals.  相似文献   

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