Abstract

POINT-COUNTERPOINT COMMENTSCardiac denervation does/does not play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantationClaudio Marconi, Mauro Marzorati, and Paolo CerretelliClaudio Marconi, Mauro Marzorati, and Paolo CerretelliPublished Online:01 Feb 2008https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.01225.2007MoreSectionsPDF (46 KB)Download PDF ToolsExport citationAdd to favoritesGet permissionsTrack citations ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInWeChat The following letters are in response to the Point:Counterpoint: Cardiac denervation does/does not play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantation.To the Editor: Denervation affects greatly cardiac function in HTx recipients. However, it is not the main determinant of their reduced aerobic performance (1, 6). Indeed, the latter depends on complex interactions among cardiac, pulmonary, neurohormonal, vascular, and skeletal muscle function (or “dysfunction”). The relative role of each of these factors may vary depending on donor's heart characteristics, recipient clinical history, and time after HTx (4). In typical adult HTx recipients, increasing cardiac output (e.g., by priming exercise) does not enhance the kinetics of the metabolic phase of the V̇o2 on response to constant-load exercise (3). In addition, near peak muscle blood flow and its time constant at the onset of exercise are within normal values (2). A convincing evidence of the role of peripheral factors in limiting exercise performance after HTx derives from experiments in pediatric patients (5). Seven of fourteen young HTx recipients (“responders”) recovered normal peak heart rate (HR) values (maximum 203, average 177 ± 16 beats/min) and normal HR response kinetics on submaximal constant-load exercise, as if functional heart reinnervation had occurred. Despite the likely recovery of normal oxygen delivery to exercising muscles, peak oxygen consumption, and the time constant of the V̇o2 on response to the same submaximal workload were like those found in the seven HTx recipients (“nonresponders”) with persisting markers of heart denervation, i.e., reduced and slower, respectively, compared with healthy subjects. These findings are indicative of a metabolic impairment and strengthen the importance of muscle dysfunction rather than cardiac denervation in limiting aerobic exercise after HTx.REFERENCES1 Andreassen A. Point: Cardiac denervation does play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantation. J Appl Physiol; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00694.2007.Google Scholar2 Cerretelli P, Marconi C, Meyer M, Ferretti G, Grassi B. Gas exchange kinetics in heart transplant recipients. Chest 101: 199S–205S, 1992.Crossref | PubMed | ISI | Google Scholar3 Grassi B, Marconi C, Meyer M, Rieu M, Cerretelli P. Gas exchange and cardiovascular kinetics with different exercise protocols in heart transplant recipients. J Appl Physiol 82: 1952–1962, 1997.Link | ISI | Google Scholar4 Marconi C, Marzorati M. Exercise after heart transplantation. Eur J Appl Physiol 90: 250–259, 2003.Crossref | PubMed | ISI | Google Scholar5 Marconi C, Marzorati M, Fiocchi R, Mamprin F, Ferrazzi P, Ferretti G, Cerretelli P. Age-related heart rate response to exercise in heart transplant recipients. Functional significance. Pflügers Arch Eur J Physiol 443: 698–706, 2002.Crossref | ISI | Google Scholar6 Richard R, Zoll J, Mettauer B, Piquard F, Geny B. Counterpoint: Cardiac denervation does not play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantation. J Appl Physiol; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00694.2007a.Google ScholarjapJ Appl PhysiolJournal of Applied PhysiologyJ Appl Physiol8750-75871522-1601American Physiological SocietyjapJ Appl PhysiolJournal of Applied PhysiologyJ Appl Physiol8750-75871522-1601American Physiological SocietyjapJ Appl PhysiolJournal of Applied PhysiologyJ Appl Physiol8750-75871522-1601American Physiological SocietyjapJ Appl PhysiolJournal of Applied PhysiologyJ Appl Physiol8750-75871522-1601American Physiological SocietyjapJ Appl PhysiolJournal of Applied PhysiologyJ Appl Physiol8750-75871522-1601American Physiological SocietyRoy J. ShephardUniversity of TorontoFebruary2008E. Sankaranarayanan PrakashSchool of Medicine Asian Institute of Medicine Science and Technology 08100 Bedong, Kedah, MalaysiaFebruary2008Bruno Grassi, Francesca Lanfranconi, Simone Porcelli, Alessandra Ferri, and Emma BorrelliUniversity of Milano, ItalyFebruary2008Etienne Delacretaz, and Hildegard TannerDepartment of Cardiology University Hospital and University of Bern SwitzerlandFebruary2008David M. Kaye, and Murray D. EslerBaker Heart Research InstituteFebruary2008To the Editor: Application of the Fick equation helps to elucidate the likely impact of a smaller increase of heart rate (1, 3) on the response to maximal exercise after cardiac transplantation and resulting denervation. In a control group of healthy 80-kg men aged 45 yr, with a resting oxygen consumption of 280 ml/min and an arteriovenous oxygen difference of 40 ml/l, the resting cardiac output would be 7 l/min (heart rate 78 beats/min, stroke volume 90 ml). In peak exercise, oxygen transport rises 10-fold (2), to 2,800 ml/min, with increases of oxygen extraction (3.5-fold), heart rate (2.21-fold to 172 beats/min), and stroke volume (1.29-fold to 116 ml).Comparable figures for patients who had participated in 16 mo of endurance training after orthotopic cardiac transplantation (2) were body mass 76 kg, resting oxygen consumption 266 ml/min, and (assuming a similar peripheral oxygen extraction) a resting cardiac output of 6.65 l/min (heart rate 97 beats/min, stroke volume 68.6 ml). The peak oxygen intake had increased 26% over the postoperative value with training, to 2,128 ml/min, 8.0 times the resting value, with a heart rate of 148 beats/min (1.53 times rest), and a stroke volume of 103 ml (1.5 times resting). But if the heart rate had risen as in control subjects, the peak oxygen intake, at 3,020 ml/min would have exceeded the control value.Plainly, the deficit of peak oxygen transport seen after cardiac transplantation would not occur if the heart rate rose as in healthy subjects. To the Editor: The issue being debated by Andreassen (1) and Richard et al. (3) is the question of what plays a quantitatively major role in limiting exercise capacity of patients with transplanted hearts: is it limitation of cardiac output secondary to cardiac denervation or is it limitation in extraction and utilization of oxygen by exercising muscle?During intense exercise, healthy well trained athletes can increase their cardiac output as much as seven times the resting value of 5 l/min; however, even theoretically whole body oxygen extraction ratio can only be increased fourfold from a baseline value of ∼25%. This is also implied in Shephard's (see letter below) response to this call for comments. Thus there is no argument that in exercise involving a large skeletal muscle mass, cardiac denervation resulting in chronotropic, inotropic, and lusitropic incompetence is quantitatively a much more significant contributor to exercise limitation. Additionally, diastolic dysfunction other than due to denervation may also limit effective use of the Frank-Starling mechanism for augmenting stroke volume during exercise.However, in a study recently published in this journal, Jendzjowsky et al. (2) elegantly demonstrated that reduced extraction of oxygen by exercising muscle as well as reduced stroke volume increments contribute to low peak exercise oxygen consumption during unilateral knee extension exercise in patients with transplanted hearts. Thus in exercise involving a smaller fraction of total skeletal muscle mass, defects in extraction of oxygen in exercising muscle are indeed a major factor limiting exercise capacity.To the Editor: Evidence in favor of the concept that after heart transplantation (HT) both a reduced capacity of O2 delivery and a reduced capacity of O2 utilization are responsible for the reduced V̇o2 peak derives from a recent study by our group (4) in which we determined pulmonary V̇o2 and vastus lateralis muscle oxygenation indexes [by near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS)] during incremental exercise to exhaustion in 20 HT recipients (HTR), tested 33.9 ± 13.1 mo after surgery. As for NIRS, we considered an index (concentration changes of deoxygenated hemoglobin and myoglobin) that reflects fractional O2 extraction, that is the ratio between O2 utilization and O2 delivery in the tissue (2, 3). V̇o2 peak was lower in HTR vs. controls, whereas the V̇o2 vs. workload relationships were the same in the two groups. At submaximal loads, for the same V̇o2, we observed a higher O2 extraction in HTR vs. controls, suggesting an impaired capacity of O2 delivery in the patients. On the other hand, at exhaustion, the peak capacity of O2 extraction was lower in HTR vs. controls. Can the impaired capacity of O2 delivery, which we observed also at submaximal loads, be attributed solely to the impaired cardiac function (1)? Presumably not. Some peripheral vascular factors, such as endothelial dysfunction (5), are likely involved as well. In any case, our data suggest that both an impaired (central and peripheral) O2 delivery by the cardiovascular system and an impaired capacity of O2 utilization by skeletal muscles contribute to the persistently reduced exercise tolerance after HT. Objective tools to determine the relative contribution of the various impairments would be needed.To the Editor: In heart transplant recipients, cardiac denervation alters the inotropic response to exertion and markedly decreases heart rate reserve, thus decreasing maximal cardiac output (1). Their initial response to exercise is characterized by a mismatch of heart rate and venous return with limited positive inotropic effect mediated by the Frank-Starling mechanism. Consequently, exercise capacity can be affected, particularly at the beginning of exertion. In some patients willing to engage in sport activities and complaining about limited exercise tolerance, implantation of rate responsive pacemakers that artificially increase heart rate reserve may significantly improve physical performance maximal work load and peak V̇o2 uptake (6).In addition to multiple altered cardiac adaptive mechanisms, other significant factors may contribute to the impaired exercise tolerance. Richard and colleagues (5) reviewed peripheral factors that play a role in the limitation of exercise tolerance, i.e., endothelial dysfunction and decreased muscular performance. Pulmonary dysfunction may also limit physical performance (3). An important point is that many of these peripheral or pulmonary factors are a consequence of severe heart failure and precede heart transplantation. For example, patients with advanced heart failure often have skeletal muscular wasting contributing to exercise intolerance beyond that expected from altered cardiac output (2). Not all the peripheral factors are reversible (4, 5), but in the absence of rejection, allograft vasculopathy, or severe forms of diastolic dysfunction, transplant patients can engage in moderate exercise, and with proper conditioning, even high levels of exercise. As almost all patients substantially improve their condition following heart transplantation, only a minority of patients will complain about limited exercise tolerance.To the Editor: For patients with end stage heart failure, cardiac transplantation remains the most effective long-term therapeutic approach. Independent of the short- and long-term complications that accompany organ transplantation, the symptomatic benefit resulting from transplantation varies substantially. A variety of studies have examined the factors that predict exercise tolerance late after transplant. Among the clinical variables of relevance, the waiting time for transplantation and duration of postoperative intensive care treatment, likely due to long-lasting deleterious effects on skeletal musculature and the related microcirculation. In conjunction, peak exercise heart rate has also been shown to be a key determinant of peak oxygen consumption (V̇o2) and exercise test duration post transplant (2, 4, 5).Given the key role of heart rate in determining the physiological response to exercise, we previously studied in detail the sympathetic control of the transplanted heart (3). We observed a progressive increase in the rate of release of norepinephrine (NE), the sympathetic neurotransmitter from the myocardium with increasing time post transplant. Moreover, this was even more apparent during exertion in which cardiac NE spillover was significantly lower early (<18 mo) after cardiac transplantation compared with control subjects (163 ± 50 vs. 1,876 ± 418 pmol/min, P < 0.01), whereas late postcardiac transplant subjects showed an intermediate response (1,080 ± 254 pmol/min). In parallel with these findings, the heart rate response in early post transplant was substantially flatter than that late post transplant. As such, while a multitude of factors contribute to the functional outcome after transplant, sympathetic reinnervation of the transplanted heart is a relevant and important process (1, 6).REFERENCES1. Andreassen A. Point: Cardiac denervation does play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantation. J Appl Physiol; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00694.2007. Google Scholar2. Kavanagh T, Mertens DJ, Shephard RJ, Beyene J, Kennedy J, Campbell R, Sawyer P, Yacoub MH. Long-term cardio-respiratory results of exercise training following cardiac transplantation. Am J Cardiol 91: 190–194, 2003. Crossref | ISI | Google Scholar3. Richard R, Zoll J, Mettauer B, Piquard F, Geny B. Counterpoint: Cardiac denervation does not play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantation. J Appl Physiol; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00694.2007a. Google ScholarREFERENCES1. Andreassen AK. Point: Cardiac denervation does play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantation. J Appl Physiol; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00694.2007. Google Scholar2. Jendzjowsky NG, Tomczak CR, Lawrance R, Taylor DA, Tymchak WJ, Riess KJ, Warburton DER, Haykowsky MJ. Impaired pulmonary oxygen uptake kinetics and reduced peak aerobic power during small muscle mass exercise in heart transplant recipients. J Appl Physiol; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00725.2007. Google Scholar3. Richard R, Zoll J, Mettauer B, Piquard F, Geny B. Counterpoint: Cardiac denervation does not play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantation. J Appl Physiol; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00694.2007a. Google ScholarREFERENCES1. Andreassen A. Point: Cardiac denervation does play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantation. J Appl Physiol; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00694.2007. Google Scholar2. Grassi B, Marzorati M, Lanfranconi F, Ferri A, Longaretti M, Stucchi A, Vago P, Marconi C, Morandi L. 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Google Scholar Download PDF Previous Back to Top Next FiguresReferencesRelatedInformationCited ByBenefits of a Supervised Ambulatory Outpatient Program in a Cardiovascular Rehabilitation Unit Prior to a Heart Transplant: A Case Study19 May 2022 | Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine, Vol. 9Last Word on Point:Counterpoint: Cardiac denervation does/does not play a major role in exercise limitation after heart transplantationBernard Geny, Ruddy Richard, Joffrey Zoll, Anne Charloux, and Francois Piquard1 February 2008 | Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol. 104, No. 2 More from this issue > Volume 104Issue 2February 2008Pages 565-567 Copyright & PermissionsCopyright © 2008 the American Physiological Societyhttps://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.01225.2007PubMed18263860History Published online 1 February 2008 Published in print 1 February 2008 Metrics

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