Wh. Reinhart et al., INFLUENCE OF EXERCISE TRAINING ON BLOOD-VISCOSITY IN PATIENTS WITH CORONARY-ARTERY DISEASE AND IMPAIRED LEFT-VENTRICULAR FUNCTION, The American heart journal, 135(3), 1998, pp. 379-382
Exercise training has recently become an accepted therapeutic modality
in chronic heart failure after myocardial infarction. Because the the
rapeutic mechanism behind it is controversial and not well understood,
we analyzed the influence of exercise training on blood viscosity. Tw
enty-five patients with chronic heart failure (election fraction < 40%
) after myocardial infarction were randomly assigned to either an 8-we
ek intensive exercise program at a residential rehabilitation center o
r 8 weeks of sedentary life at home. Exercise consisted of two 1-hour
walking sessions per day and four intensive bicycle ergometer training
sessions of 40 minutes at 70% to 80% peak exercise capacity per week.
Whole blood viscosity, viscosity at standardized hematocrit of 45% (P
-45) at high and low shear rates, and plasma viscosity were measured i
n a Couette-type viscometer before, during, and at the end of the stud
y period. Exercise training, which significantly increased maximal car
diac output and oxygen uptake, did not change plasma viscosity, whole
blood viscosity, and P-45 Significantly. Sedentary controls, however,
had a higher whole blood viscosity and P-45 after 8 weeks. No statisti
cal difference was found, however, between the two groups. We conclude
that blood rheology remains unaffected by exercise training in patien
ts with chronic heart failure. The improvement of blood viscosity rema
ins an interesting-therapeutic option for the symptoms of these patien
ts, which must be achieved by methods other than exercise training.