Abstract

The utility of metabolic gas exchange measurements in evaluating the severity and determinants of exercise limitation was studied during upright symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise in 135 consecutive patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HC) and 50 healthy age- and gender-matched volunteers. Peak oxygen consumption (VO 2) was less than predicted (age, gender, and size) in 99% patients. Peak VO 2 was significantly associated with New York Heart Association functional class; however, there was considerable overlap of peak VO 2 between classes I and III (70 ± 15%, 56 ± 15%, 35 ± 11%, respectively). Patients with abnormal blood pressure responses and patients with chronotropic incompetence during exercise had lower percent-predicted peak VO 2 than patients with normal blood pressure and heart rate responses during exercise (p = 0.0001 and p <0.001, respectively). Percent-predicted peak VO 2 was similar in patients with and without resting left ventricular outflow obstruction. Of those patients with resting gradients, however, there was a strong inverse correlation between the magnitude of the gradient and peak VO 2 (r = 0.5; p <0.001). In conclusion, peak VO 2 is significantly related to New York Heart Association functional class in this group of patients with HC, but peak VO 2 is a superior measure of cardiovascular performance in individual patients. Our peak VO 2 data indicate that mechanical obstruction has an adverse pathophysiologic effect on functional capacity and provide the rationale to support treatments aimed at gradient reduction. Low peak VO 2 characteristics including those with normal or near-normal left ventricular wall thickness suggests that measurement of peak VO 2 may aid in the differential diagnosis between HC and athlete’s heart.

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