Abstract
Increase in plasma hypoxanthine (HX) (purine nucleotide degradation product from working muscle) reflects insufficiency of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) supply during exercise, and the exercise-induced increase in plasma norepinephrine (NE) can be an index of sympathetic nerve activity. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between plasma NE and plasma HX during exercise in patients with heart failure (HF) according to its severity. Blood lactate, plasma HX, and plasma NE were measured at rest and after symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise test in 54 patients with HF (New York Heart Association [NYHA] classes I:18, II:20, III:16) and 19 normal subjects. Peak work rate and peak oxygen uptake decreased as the NYHA functional class increased. Blood lactate and plasma HX levels at rest were comparable, but peak blood lactate (normal, NYHA I, II, III: 6.4+/-0.3, 5.6+/-0.4, 5.3+/-0.3, 3.5+/-0.2 mmol/L) and peak plasma HX (3.6+/-0.4, 3.0+/-0.5, 2.4+/-0.3, 1.4+/-0.1 micromol/L) were progressively smaller as HF worsened. Resting plasma NE (137+/-15, 180+/-29, 201+/-21, 318+/-55 pg/mL) was significantly higher in NYHA class III HF, but peak plasma NE (2,235+/-356, 2,021+/-326, 2,188+/-292, 2,210+/-316 pg/mL) was not different among groups. The ratio of the exercise increments in plasma NE to the increments in plasma HX during exercise (deltaplasma NE/deltaplasma HX: 666+/-96, 1,083+/-229, 1,252+/-222, 2,260+/-351) increased according to the severity of HF. These data suggest that plasma levels of HX after maximal exercise are smaller as HF worsened, and sympathetic responsiveness to the imbalance of ATP supply-demand during exercise is augmented according to the severity of HF.
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