Abstract

Exercise capacity increases to a variable degree in coronary patients during cardiac rehabilitation. The effect of baseline exercise-induced ischemia on the response to a 12-week conditioning program was evaluated in 106 coronary patients. The magnitude of exercise conditioning response was greater in nonischemic patients than in ischemic patients, with maximal exercise intensity increasing 69 versus 50% (7.2 to 12.1 vs 7.1 to 10.6 METs) (p < 0.05) and maximal oxygen consumption increasing 28 versus 10% (23.1 to 29.6 vs 23.0 to 25.4 cc/kg/min) (p < 0.05). Markers of conditioning during submaximal exercise such as heart rate and heart rate-systolic blood pressure product were similarly reduced in both groups. The groups did not differ by age, diagnosis, resting ejection fraction, incidence of β-blocker use, maximal exercise capacity, maximal exercise heart rate, blood pressure or intensity of actual exercise training. These results suggest that exercise-induced ischemia alters the stimulus to adapt to exercise training.

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