Abstract

BackgroundAlthough atrial function has prognostic significance in many cardiovascular conditions, changes during exercise have not previously been assessed. The aim of this study was to evaluate left atrial (LA) and right atrial (RA) volume and function during incremental exercise, both in normal individuals, healthy athletes, and in patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH).MethodsFifteen healthy non-athletes, 15 athletes and 15 CTEPH patients underwent multi-slice real-time cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging at rest and during supine bicycle exercise with simultaneous invasive hemodynamic measurements.ResultsAt rest, athletes had larger indexed maximal RA and LA volumes (iRAVmax, iLAVmax) than CTEPH patients and non-athletes, the latter two groups having similar values. CTEPH patients had lower RA and LA emptying functions (EmF) at rest. During exercise, RA volumes (maximum and minimum) increased in CTEPH patients, whilst decreasing in athletes and non-athletes (P < 0.001). The exercise-induced change in iLAVmax was similar between groups, but iLAVmin did not decrease in CTEPH patients. Thus exercise-induced increases in RAEmF and LAEmF, as seen in normal physiology, were significantly impaired in CTEPH patients. At peak exercise, RA volumes (maximum and minimum) and EmF correlated strongly with RA pressure (R = 0.70; P = 0.005; R = 0.83; P < 0.001; R = −0.87; P < 0.001). On multivariate analysis, peak exercise RAEmF and iLAVmin were independent predictors of VO2peak in CTEPH patients and together explained 72% of the variance in VO2peak (ß =0.581 and ß = −0.515, respectively).ConclusionsIn normal physiology, RAEmF and LAEmF increase with exercise, whereas CTEPH patients have impaired LAEmF and RAEmF, which becomes more apparent during exercise. Therefore, the changes in atrial volumes and function during exercise enable a far better distinction between physiological and pathological atrial remodeling than resting measures of volumes which are prone to confounding factors (e.g. endurance training). Peak exercise RAEmF is a good marker of poor functional state in CTEPH patients.

Highlights

  • Atrial function has prognostic significance in many cardiovascular conditions, changes during exercise have not previously been assessed

  • chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) patients were older than non-athletes and athletes, whilst there was no difference in gender

  • Resting iLAVmin was higher in athletes than in non-athletes and CTEPH patients. iRAVmin was larger in athletes compared to non-athletes, but similar to CTEPH patients

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Summary

Introduction

Atrial function has prognostic significance in many cardiovascular conditions, changes during exercise have not previously been assessed. Atrial volume and function have prognostic significance in many cardiovascular conditions [1,2,3], there are scarce data pertaining to changes in atrial volumes during exercise in health [4, 5] and none in disease. This is largely due to the limitations of assessing atrial volumes during exercise using transthoracic echocardiography or. It has been shown that insufficient right ventricular (RV) contractile reserve during exercise is an another important predictor of prognosis among patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension. Exerciseinduced changes in atrial volumes and function during exercise may provide additional information over RV resting measures

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