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Suppression of cerebral hemodynamics is associated with reduced functional capacity in patients with heart failure
Authors:Fu Tieh-Cheng  Wang Chao-Hung  Hsu Chih-Chin  Cherng Wen-Jin  Huang Shu-Chun  Wang Jong-Shyan
Institution:Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Gung Memorial Hospital, Keelung, Taiwan.
Abstract:This investigation elucidated the underlying mechanisms of functional impairments in patients with heart failure (HF) by simultaneously comparing cardiac-cerebral-muscle hemodynamic and ventilatory responses to exercise among HF patients with various functional capacities. One hundred one patients with HF New York Heart Association HF functional class II (HF-II, n = 53) and functional class III (HF-III, n = 48) patients] and 71 normal subjects older control (O-C, n = 39) and younger control (Y-C, n = 32) adults] performed an incremental exercise test using a bicycle ergometer. A recently developed noninvasive bioreactance device was adopted to measure cardiac hemodynamics, and near-infrared spectroscopy was employed to assess perfusions in the frontal cerebral lobe (ΔTHb](FC)) and vastus lateralis muscle (ΔTHb](VL)). The results demonstrated that the Y-C group had higher levels of cardiac output, ΔTHb](FC), and ΔTHb](VL) during exercise than the O-C group. Moreover, these cardiac/peripheral hemodynamic responses to exercise in HF-III group were smaller than those in both HF-II and O-C groups. Although the change of cardiac output caused by exercise was normalized, the amounts of blood distributed to frontal cerebral lobe and vastus lateralis muscle in the HF-III group significantly declined during exercise. The HF-III patients had lower oxygen-uptake efficiency slopes (OUES) and greater Ve-Vo(2) slopes than the HF-II patients and age-matched controls. However, neither hemodynamic nor ventilatory response to exercise differed significantly between the HF-II and O-C groups. Cardiac output, ΔTHb](FC), and ΔTHb](VL) during exercise were directly related to the OUES and Vo(2peak) and inversely related to the Ve-Vco(2) slope. Moreover, cardiac output or ΔTHb](FC) was an effect modifier, which modulated the correlation status between ΔTHb](VL) and Ve-Vco(2) slope. We concluded that the suppression of cerebral/muscle hemodynamics during exercise is associated with ventilatory abnormality, which reduces functional capacity in patients with HF.
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