Abstract

The adaptation of the structural components in the myocardium of the left ventricle to strenuous exercise was studied morphometrically in rats following a treadmill running program. The response of the left ventricle was evaluated separately in the interventricular septum and in the left ventricular free wall. Exercise produced a 24% growth of the septum without altering free wall volume. The hypertrophic expansion of the septum was characterized by a decrease in the volume fraction of capillary lumen in the myocardium (-20%), a reduction in the capillary luminal surface per unit volume of myocytes (-17%) and by an increase in the maximum distance from the capillary wall to the mitochondria of myocytes (9%). Although none of these changes were demonstrable on a statistical basis in the left ventricular free wall, similar results were obtained in the whole left ventricle by combining the data from the septum and free wall. Since the septum constitutes a functional unit with the free wall, it was concluded that the effect of excessive physical activity on the capillary parameters responsible for oxygen availability and diffusion could lead to a local reduction in the oxygenation potential of ventricular myocardium.

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