BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine (Aug 2023)

Effects of high-intensity interval training on cardiac remodelling, function and coronary microcirculation in de novo heart transplant patients: a substudy of the HITTS randomised controlled trial

  • Lars Gullestad,
  • Bjørn Bendz,
  • Kari Nytrøen,
  • Ketil Lunde,
  • Muzammil Rafique,
  • Ole Geir Solberg,
  • Klaus Murbræch,
  • Katrine Rolid

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2022-001331
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3

Abstract

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Objectives High-intensity interval training (HIT) improves peak oxygen consumption (VO2peak) in de novo heart transplant (HTx) recipients. It remains unclear whether this improvement early after HTx is solely dependent on peripheral adaptations, or due to a linked chain of central and peripheral adaptations. The objective of this study was to determine whether HIT results in structural and functional adaptations in the cardiovascular system.Methods Eighty-one de novo HTx recipients were randomly assigned to participate in either 9 months of supervised HIT or standard care exercise-based rehabilitation. Cardiac function was assessed by echocardiogram and the coronary microcirculation with the index of microcirculatory resistance (IMR) at baseline and 12 months after HTx.Results Cardiac function as assessed by global longitudinal strain was significantly better in the HIT group than in the standard care group (16.3±1.2% vs 15.6±2.2%, respectively, treatment effect = –1.1% (95% CI –2.0% to –0.2%), p=0.02), as was the end-diastolic volume (128.5±20.8 mL vs 123.4±15.5 mL, respectively, treatment effect=4.9 mL (95% CI 0.5 to 9.2 mL), p=0.03). There was a non-significant tendency for IMR to indicate improved microcirculatory function (13.8±8.0 vs 16.8±12.0, respectively, treatment effect = –4.3 (95% CI –9.1 to 0.6), p=0.08).Conclusion When initiated early after HTx, HIT leads to both structural and functional cardiovascular adaptations.Trial registration number NCT01796379.