Abstract

Simple SummaryRegular exercise is a stressful stimulus that elicits physiological responses in systolic and diastolic functions in human athletes, the so-called “athlete’s heart”. The present study reports findings obtained from echocardiography to measure the ventricular dimensions at rest in beagle dogs undergoing an endurance training program carried out on a treadmill with the intensity set at 70–80% of the velocity corresponding to the lactate threshold. Echocardiography was performed with routine measurements of the left ventricular systolic and diastolic function by the two-dimensional and Doppler techniques. After the training, the principal component analysis of echocardiographic variables was conducted to evaluate dimensional changes in left ventricular function. Principal components analysis was able to capture the qualitative echocardiographic changes produced by the endurance training. Eight weeks of the lactate-guided endurance training program could lead to concomitant left ventricular dilation without hypertrophy of the ventricular walls, emphasizing the left ventricular systolic and diastolic functions. These results suggest that submaximal aerobic training may induce physiological cardiac remodeling, improve the left ventricular functions, promote health, and minimize any injuries produced during heart disease, although its effectiveness for the latter effect must be confirmed in future studies.This research focuses on the adjustments in systolic and diastolic functions that are not fully understood in dogs submitted to athletic training. Beagle dogs carried out an endurance training program (ETP) prescribed from the external training load, corresponding to 70–80% of the lactate threshold (VLT) velocity. Eighteen dogs were randomly assigned to two groups: control (C, n = 8), active dogs that did not perform any forced exercise, and trained (T, n = 10), submitted to the ETP during eight weeks. All dogs were evaluated before and after the ETP period using two-dimensional echocardiography, M-mode, Doppler, and two-dimensional speckle tracking. A principal component analysis (PCA) of the echocardiographic variables was performed. The ETP improved the left ventricular internal dimension at the end of diastole (LVDd), the left ventricular internal dimension at the end of diastole to aorta ratio (LVDd: Ao), and the strain rate indices. PCA was able to capture the dimensionality and qualitative echocardiography changes produced by the ETP. These findings indicated that the training prescribed based on the lactate threshold improved the diastolic and systolic functions. This response may be applied to improve myocardial function, promote health, and mitigate any injuries produced during heart failure.

Highlights

  • Prolonged physical conditioning is often associated with inducing morphological and functional cardiac changes in human athletes, the so-called “athlete’s heart”

  • The cardiac physiological and echocardiographic variables revealed that the dogs of both groups were healthy

  • Our study study was was the the first first to to evaluate evaluate the the effect effect of of chronic chronic submaximal submaximal exercise exercise preprescribed scribed from from the the velocity velocity corresponding corresponding to to the the Lactate Threshold (LT)

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Summary

Introduction

Prolonged physical conditioning is often associated with inducing morphological and functional cardiac changes in human athletes, the so-called “athlete’s heart”. Ventriculography, or nuclear magnetic resonance, this morphofunctional alteration may indicate an increase in the parasympathetic tone associated with an increase in the left and right ventricles. These physiological changes are described in dogs used in various activities such as rescue, agility, or mushing [2,3,4]. Analyzing the association between heart size and aerobic performance in horses, the literature has shown intense positive relationships between several measures of cardiac function and VO2 max, a key decisive of aerobic capacity [1,5]

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