Circulation, Vol 72, 1237-1243, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
MH Crawford, MA Petru and C Rabinowitz
To determine the changes in left ventricular volume and their time course
during exercise we studied 30 runners. Left ventricular end- diastolic and
end-systolic volumes were measured from biapical two- dimensional
echocardiograms recorded during graded upright bicycle exercise. The
validity of this echocardiographic technique was assessed by comparing
measurements at rest and exercise with results obtained by gated
equilibrium radionuclide angiography in 10 patients with coronary artery
disease. Although the absolute volume measurements were lower by
echocardiography, ejection fraction was not significantly different and the
directional changes in volume during exercise were comparable. In the
runners, resting left ventricular end-diastolic volume measurements by
echocardiography correlated with their maximum bicycle exercise endurance
times (r = .80). Left ventricular end-diastolic volume, stroke volume, and
ejection fraction increased during exercise with the most marked changes
occurring in the first half of exercise. Systolic blood
pressure/end-systolic volume (SBP/ESV) also increased during exercise, but
the largest change occurred during the second half of exercise. Left
ventricular volumes were larger in the 12 competitive marathon runners
(maximum exercise duration greater than or equal to 27 min) as compared
with the 18 noncompetitive runners (exercise duration less than or equal to
23 min): resting end-diastolic volume 130 +/- 29 (SD) ml vs 87 +/- 20 ml (p
less than .001), respectively. During exercise the competitive runners
exhibited a larger increase in end- diastolic volume and the noncompetitive
athletes showed a greater increase in SBP/ESV. Therefore, highly trained
competitive marathon runners make greater use of the less energy-consuming
Frank-Starling mechanism to accomplish high levels of isotonic exercise
performance as compared with less well-trained runners.
ARTICLES
Effect of isotonic exercise training on left ventricular volume during upright exercise
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