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(Circulation. 2004;109:2897-2904.)
© 2004 American Heart Association, Inc.
Basic Science Reports |
From the Department of Circulation and Medical Imaging, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway (O.J.K., P.M.H., U.W., Ø.E.), and the Department of Cardiology, St Olavs Hospital, Trondheim, Norway (U.W., Ø.E.).
Correspondence to Øyvind Ellingsen, Department of Circulation and Medical Imaging, Medical Technology Research Center, Olav Kyrres gate 3, N-7489 Trondheim, Norway. E-mail oyvind.ellingsen{at}medisin.ntnu.no
Received December 11, 2003; revision received March 9, 2004; accepted March 9, 2004.
Background Physical fitness and level of regular exercise are closely related to cardiovascular health. A regimen of regular intensity-controlled treadmill exercise was implemented and withdrawn to identify cellular mechanisms associated with exercise capacity and maximal oxygen uptake (
O2max).
Methods and Results Time-dependent associations between cardiomyocyte dimensions, contractile capacity, and
O2max were assessed in adult rats after high-level intensity-controlled treadmill running for 2, 4, 8, and 13 weeks and detraining for 2 and 4 weeks. With training, cardiomyocyte length, relaxation, shortening, Ca2+ decay, and estimated cell volume correlated with increased
O2max (r=0.92, 0.92, 0.88, 0.84, 0.73; P<0.01). Multiple regression analysis identified cell length, relaxation, and Ca2+ decay as the main explanatory variables for
O2max (R2=0.87, P<0.02). When training stopped, exercise-gained
O2max decreased 50% within 2 weeks and stabilized at 5% above sedentary controls after 4 weeks. Cardiomyocyte size regressed in parallel with
O2max and remained (9%) above sedentary after 4 weeks, whereas cardiomyocyte shortening, contraction/relaxation- and Ca2+-transient time courses, and endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation regressed completely within 2 to 4 weeks of detraining. Cardiomyocyte length, estimated cell volume, width, shortening, and Ca2+ decay and endothelium-dependent arterial relaxation all correlated with
O2max (r=0.85, 0.84, 0.75, 0.63, 0.54, 0.37; P<0.01). Multiple regression identified cardiomyocyte length and vasorelaxation as the main determinants for regressed
O2max during detraining (R2=0.76, P=0.02).
Conclusions Cardiovascular adaptation to regular exercise is highly dynamic. On detraining, most of the exercise-gained aerobic fitness acquired over 2 to 3 months is lost within 2 to 4 weeks. The close association between cardiomyocyte dimensions, contractile capacity, arterial relaxation, and aerobic fitness suggests cellular mechanisms underlying these changes.
Key Words: exercise myocytes hypertrophy contractility endothelium
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