1 / 42

Exercise Diego Medvedofsky 2/2012

Exercise Diego Medvedofsky 2/2012. Background. ~50% of pts with symptomatic HF experience HFpEF Morbi-mortality is high and comparable to HF with reduced LVEF (HFrEF) In HFpEF no effective therapeutic strategies shown to be effective in large clinical trials. Background.

ludlow
Télécharger la présentation

Exercise Diego Medvedofsky 2/2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Exercise Diego Medvedofsky 2/2012

  2. Background • ~50% of pts with symptomatic HF experience HFpEF • Morbi-mortality is high and comparable to HF with reduced LVEF (HFrEF) • In HFpEF no effective therapeutic strategies shown to be effective in large clinical trials

  3. Background • In HFrEF exercise training (ET) improves exercise capacity and reduces morbidity (Van Tol, Eur J Heart Fail 2006) • HF-ACTION also demonstrated a benefit with ET in HFrEF (Piepoli, BMJ 2004, O’Connor, JAMA 2009) • Conditions associated with HFpEF (endothelial dysfunction, systemic inflammation, metabolic sme) are improved by ET (Adamopoulos, Eur Heart J 2001, Boulé, JAMA 2001, Linke, JACC 2001)

  4. Objectives To determine whether structured exercise training (ET) improves • Exercise performnce • LV diastolic FC • Quality of life (QoL) in pts with HF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF)

  5. Methods • Prospective, multicenter, blind, RCT in HFpEF • NYHA II/III • LVEF≥50% • Sinus • At least 1 of: overweight, DM, HTN, hyperlipidemia, smoking

  6. Methods: Exclusion criteria • Significant valvular disorders, pulmonary disease, angina, untreated CAD>50%, S/P MI, anemia, BP>150/100 mmHg, relevant arrhythmia, change in CV cardiovascular medication in previous 4 weeks

  7. Methods • 64 pts (age 65±7, 56% female) with HFpEF were prospectively randomized (2:1) to • From 1/2007-8/2007 • Supervised endurance/resistance training in addition to usual care (ET, n=44) • Usual care alone (UC) (n=20)

  8. Intervention • Supervised, facility based training program • Endurance and resistance (32 sessions) • Weeks 1-4: aerobic endurance (cycling) • Target HR of 50-60% of peak oxygen uptake (peak VO2) baseline

  9. Intervention • From week 5: • ↑ training freq and workload • Added resistance training (bench press, leg press, leg curl, rowing machine, triceps dip, latissimus pull down)

  10. Methods • Primary endpoint • Change in peak VO2 after 3 months

  11. Methods • Secondary endpoints • Systolic and diastolic function • Effects on cardiac structure [LV mass index (LVMI) and LA volume index (LAVI)] • QoL [Health Survey (SF-36) and Minnesota Questionnaire (MLWHFQ)] • Serum biomarkers: • NT-proBNP • PINP (serum procollagen type I-NP)

  12. Results • Peak VO2 • The mean benefit of ET was 3.3 ml/min/kg (95% CI: 1.8 to 4.8, p<0.001), NNT 3.5 • Increase in 6 min walk of 24 m (<0.001)

  13. Results • E/e' and LA volume index • ↓ with ET, unchanged with UC • The physical functioning score (36-Item Short-Form Health Survey) • ↑ with ET, unchanged with UC

  14. Safety • Brief episodes of palpitations (2) • Dyspnea (3) • Mild musculoskeletal discomfort (9)

  15. Compliance • Training group - exercise sessions • N=15 (34%) participated in >90% • N=23 (52%) in 70% to 90% • N=6 (14%) in <70%

  16. Conclusions • 1ST multicenter, prospective RCT • Effects of supervised, structured ET on HFpEF pts • exercise capacity • diastolic function (atrial reverse remodeling and improved LV diastolic function) • QoL • Endurance/resistance ET over 3 months was a feasible, safe, and effective intervention

  17. Limitations • Nature of ET interventions prohibits pure blinding • Small number of younger and middle aged pts in short-term follow-up

  18. Background • Adults with congenital heart disease (CHD) are at increased risk of mortality and morbidity • Parameters of cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPX) identified as strong predictors of mortality in adults with CHD • guide clinicians in assessing prognosis and planning interventions

  19. Investigation • Relation between CPX parameters and their combination • may provide optimal prognostic info on midterm survival in this population

  20. Methods • 1375 pts w/adult (>14y) CHD (33±13 y) • Retrospectively • CPX • Single center, 10 years (1999-2008) • All cause mortality • Measured: • Peak oxygen consumption (peak VO2) • Ventilation/CO2 (VE/VCO2 slope) • HR reserve (peak - resting HR)

  21. Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing • On a treadmill - modified Bruce protocol • All patients were encouraged to exercise to exhaustion • Respiratory mass spectrometer: ventilation, VO2, VCO2 • ECG: HR • Manually sphygmomanometry: BP • Pulse oximetry: O2 saturation

  22. SO2<90% 16% I 51% II 39% Simple: ASD VSD PDA AO coartat

  23. BB, CCB, AMIODAR

  24. Results • Follow-up of 5.8 years • 117 patients died: • HF 41 • SCD 34 • Perioperative 12 • Inf 5 • PE 1 • Hemoptysis 1 • Brain hemorrhage 1 • Out of Hospital 21

  25. Results

  26. Results • Risk of death ↑ with: • ↓ peak VO2 • ↓ HR reserve • ↑ VE/VCO2 slope in noncyanotic pts • Not predictive in cyanotic pts • Combination of peak VO2+HR reserve • greatest predictive info • ↓ in pts with peak respiratory exchange ratio <1.0

  27. (Neg chronotropic agents)

  28. Conclusions • Peak VO2 and HR reserve data can be used to generate estimates of 5-year survival across a wide spectrum of adults with CHD

  29. Conclusions • CPX: strong prognostic info in adult pts w/CHD • Data useful for comparing the exercise capacity of a particular patient vs pts in the same diagnostic group

  30. Limitations • Retrospective • Part of routine evaluation • Tertiary center • Ed: patients terminated exercise before reaching their cardiovascular limit

  31. THANKS THANKS

More Related