Abstract
Background: Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a chronic debilitating illness. The effects of vigorous aerobic exercise training (AET) on heart function in PAH are poorly understood.
Methods: Eighteen women with PAH (aged 56.2 +/- 8.8 yr, body mass index: 28.8 +/- 7.3 kg/m2) underwent 10 wk of vigorous AET. Cardiac function was observed at rest and peak exercise using bioelectrical impedance cardiography before and after the AET. Cardiac function was observed in a small PAH subset (n = 7) for 10 wk before beginning the AET. A cohort of sedentary women (n = 19) served as healthy controls.
Results: Left ventricular ejection fraction (48 +/- 9.2 vs 61.5 +/- 13.3%, P = .034) and the systemic vascular resistance index (2258 +/- 419.1 vs 2939 +/- 962.4 dyn[middle dot]sec/cm5[middle dot]m2, P = .008) were lower at supine rest in the baseline PAH group versus the healthy group, as were peak exercise heart rate (140 +/- 13.3 vs 170 +/- 13.8 beats/min, P < .001) and systemic vascular resistance index (828 +/- 141.1 vs 824 +/- 300.9 dyn[middle dot]sec/cm5[middle dot]m2, P = .050) after controlling for age and heart rate. Systemic vascular resistance index measured at peak exercise decreased in the PAH group after AET (828 +/- 141.1 vs 766 +/- 139.6 dyn[middle dot]sec/cm5[middle dot]m2, P = .020). Left ventricular early diastolic filling ratio worsened in the PAH subset prior to AET (95.9 +/- 19.4 vs 76.2 +/- 18.9%, P = .043) and remained unchanged after AET.
Conclusion: Vigorous AET was not associated with significant declines in left ventricular systolic or diastolic function in women with PAH. Aerobic exercise training may be beneficial for reducing afterload and may preserve left ventricular diastolic function.