Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Sep 2019)

Effects of 6 Months of Exercise‐Based Cardiac Rehabilitation on Autonomic Function and Neuro‐Cardiovascular Stress Reactivity in Coronary Artery Disease Patients

  • Mark B. Badrov,
  • Katelyn N. Wood,
  • Sophie Lalande,
  • Carolyn P. Sawicki,
  • Lindsay J. Borrell,
  • Carly C. Barron,
  • Jennifer L. Vording,
  • Arlene Fleischhauer,
  • Neville Suskin,
  • Cheri L. McGowan,
  • J. Kevin Shoemaker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.119.012257
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 17

Abstract

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Background Autonomic dysregulation represents a hallmark of coronary artery disease (CAD). Therefore, we investigated the effects of exercise‐based cardiac rehabilitation (CR) on autonomic function and neuro‐cardiovascular stress reactivity in CAD patients. Methods and Results Twenty‐two CAD patients (4 women; 62±8 years) were studied before and following 6 months of aerobic‐ and resistance‐training–based CR. Twenty‐two similarly aged, healthy individuals (CTRL; 7 women; 62±11 years) served as controls. We measured blood pressure, muscle sympathetic nerve activity, heart rate, heart rate variability (linear and nonlinear), and cardiovagal (sequence method) and sympathetic (linear relationship between burst incidence and diastolic blood pressure) baroreflex sensitivity during supine rest. Furthermore, neuro‐cardiovascular reactivity during short‐duration static handgrip (20s) at 40% maximal effort was evaluated. Six months of CR lowered resting blood pressure (P0.05) and cardiovagal baroreflex sensitivity (P=0.11) were unchanged following CR, yet values were not different pre‐CR from CTRL (all P>0.05). Furthermore, before CR, CAD patients displayed greater blood pressure and muscle sympathetic nerve activity reactivity to static handgrip versus CTRL (all P<0.05); yet, responses were reduced following CR (all P<0.05) to levels observed in CTRL. Conclusions Six months of exercise‐based CR was associated with marked improvement in baseline autonomic function and neuro‐cardiovascular stress reactivity in CAD patients, which may play a role in the reduced cardiac risk and improved survival observed in patients following exercise training.

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