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Regular physical exercise, heart rate variability and turbulence in a 6-year randomized controlled trial in middle-aged men: the DNASCO study.
Life Sci. 2005 Oct 07; 77(21):2723-34.LS

Abstract

HRV and HRT are independent predictors of cardiovascular mortality. Aging reduces HRV, but results from the physical exercise trials are controversial. The primary aim was to study changes in heart rate variability (HRV) and heart rate turbulence (HRT) in a six-year controlled randomized trial at regular low to moderate intensity physical exercise. One hundred forty men aged 53--63 years were randomized in to an exercise or a control groups. The participants underwent a maximal bicycle ergometer exercise test with respiratory gas analyses annually for six years. At baseline and after intervention, 24-h ambulatory ECG registrations were performed to assess HRV (n=100). HRT was determined among subjects with single ventricular premature complexes (VPC) (n=73). In the exercise group, ventilatory aerobic threshold (VAT) increased by 16% indicating enhanced submaximal cardiorespiratory fitness. No significant differences were found in any of the HRV or HRT parameters between the groups. However, the observed increase in VAT correlated significantly with the improvement in HRV parameters. The change in turbulence slope (TS) correlated with the changes in most HRV variables and the change in turbulence onset (TO) correlated with the changes in three frequency domain parameters. Our results suggest that in addition to improvement in submaximal cardiorespiratory fitness, regular low to moderate intensity physical exercise seems to have beneficial effects also on cardiac autonomic nervous function, a clinically relevant predictor of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.

Authors+Show Affiliations

The Department of Internal Medicine, Kuopio University Hospital, P.O. Box 1777, 70211 Kuopio, Finland. Petri.Tuomainen@kuh.fiNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Clinical Trial
Journal Article
Randomized Controlled Trial
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

15978638

Citation

Tuomainen, Petri, et al. "Regular Physical Exercise, Heart Rate Variability and Turbulence in a 6-year Randomized Controlled Trial in Middle-aged Men: the DNASCO Study." Life Sciences, vol. 77, no. 21, 2005, pp. 2723-34.
Tuomainen P, Peuhkurinen K, Kettunen R, et al. Regular physical exercise, heart rate variability and turbulence in a 6-year randomized controlled trial in middle-aged men: the DNASCO study. Life Sci. 2005;77(21):2723-34.
Tuomainen, P., Peuhkurinen, K., Kettunen, R., & Rauramaa, R. (2005). Regular physical exercise, heart rate variability and turbulence in a 6-year randomized controlled trial in middle-aged men: the DNASCO study. Life Sciences, 77(21), 2723-34.
Tuomainen P, et al. Regular Physical Exercise, Heart Rate Variability and Turbulence in a 6-year Randomized Controlled Trial in Middle-aged Men: the DNASCO Study. Life Sci. 2005 Oct 7;77(21):2723-34. PubMed PMID: 15978638.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Regular physical exercise, heart rate variability and turbulence in a 6-year randomized controlled trial in middle-aged men: the DNASCO study. AU - Tuomainen,Petri, AU - Peuhkurinen,Keijo, AU - Kettunen,Raimo, AU - Rauramaa,Rainer, PY - 2004/11/01/received PY - 2005/02/21/revised PY - 2005/05/18/accepted PY - 2005/6/28/pubmed PY - 2005/10/29/medline PY - 2005/6/28/entrez SP - 2723 EP - 34 JF - Life sciences JO - Life Sci VL - 77 IS - 21 N2 - HRV and HRT are independent predictors of cardiovascular mortality. Aging reduces HRV, but results from the physical exercise trials are controversial. The primary aim was to study changes in heart rate variability (HRV) and heart rate turbulence (HRT) in a six-year controlled randomized trial at regular low to moderate intensity physical exercise. One hundred forty men aged 53--63 years were randomized in to an exercise or a control groups. The participants underwent a maximal bicycle ergometer exercise test with respiratory gas analyses annually for six years. At baseline and after intervention, 24-h ambulatory ECG registrations were performed to assess HRV (n=100). HRT was determined among subjects with single ventricular premature complexes (VPC) (n=73). In the exercise group, ventilatory aerobic threshold (VAT) increased by 16% indicating enhanced submaximal cardiorespiratory fitness. No significant differences were found in any of the HRV or HRT parameters between the groups. However, the observed increase in VAT correlated significantly with the improvement in HRV parameters. The change in turbulence slope (TS) correlated with the changes in most HRV variables and the change in turbulence onset (TO) correlated with the changes in three frequency domain parameters. Our results suggest that in addition to improvement in submaximal cardiorespiratory fitness, regular low to moderate intensity physical exercise seems to have beneficial effects also on cardiac autonomic nervous function, a clinically relevant predictor of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. SN - 0024-3205 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/15978638/Regular_physical_exercise_heart_rate_variability_and_turbulence_in_a_6_year_randomized_controlled_trial_in_middle_aged_men:_the_DNASCO_study_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -