Abstract

Current guidelines for exercise training in coronary patients state that in the presence of exercise-induced ischemia, the heart rate during exercise should be at least 10 beats/min below the heart rate associated with an ST segment depression of 1 mm or greater. For patients with a relatively low ischemic threshold, this recommendation does not allow for a sufficient training stimulus. To document the effects of a single session of exercise above the ischemic threshold on biochemical markers of myocardial injury in stable coronary patients with exercise-induced ischemia. Because creatine kinase (CK) and its MB isoenzyme (CK-MB) can both increase after exercise because of skeletal muscle injury, troponin T was also measured. Twenty-one patients with documented coronary artery disease underwent two 20 min exercise sessions. The intensity of the first exercise training session was fixed at a heart rate below the ischemic threshold (ie, approximately 10 beats/min lower than the heart rate associated with the appearance of an ST segment depression of 1 mm or greater). The intensity of the second exercise session was fixed at a heart rate above the ischemic threshold. Blood test measurements at baseline, 6 h after and 24 h after the exercise sessions did not show any increase in total CK, CK-MB or troponin. The value of all measurements remained well below the lower limits associated with myocardial damage. A 20 min period of exercise above the ischemic threshold did not result in myocardial necrosis.

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