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Lifetime change in central and peripheral haemodynamics in relation to exercise capacity
Authors:Lars Lind  Erik Lampa
Abstract:Exercise capacity as well as many resting central and peripheral haemodynamic features declines by age. We aimed to investigate which haemodynamic features change the most during life and which change in parallel to exercise capacity. We performed a maximal bicycle exercise test with gas exchange in 103 healthy subjects (24 young, 55 middle‐aged and 24 elderly). Endothelial function, arterial compliance/stiffness and heart rate variability (HRV) were evaluated, and the myocardium and carotid arteries were investigated by ultrasound. Exercise capacity declined by almost 50% over the lifespan. Several markers reflecting arterial compliance/stiffness and HRV, as well as carotid intima–media thickness (IMT), showed lifetime impairments by >100%, while markers of LV systolic function, diastolic blood pressure and carotid artery blood flow showed only minor changes with age. The decline in exercise capacity clusters closely with many other variables measured during the exercise test, but also to resting vital capacity, left ventricular end‐diastolic diameter and resting gas exchange (VO2, VCO2) to a lesser degree. Resting vital capacity was closely related to exercise capacity in the middle‐aged group. We conclude that many of the resting markers of central and peripheral haemodynamics declined during life, in parallel to the decline in exercise capacity. However, some haemodynamic features, such as LF/HF ratio at HRV, stiffness index beta of the carotid artery, and heart rate reserve at the exercise test, showed a more exaggerated decline, indicating that those are not closely linked to exercise capacity.
Keywords:ageing  blood vessels  exercise  haemodynamic  myocardium
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