Abstract

The exaggerated ventilatory response in patients with heart failure is clearly multifactorial and complex beyond a mere reduction in pulmonary blood flow. Pulmonary dysfunction, including ventilation-perfusion mismatching, decreased lung compliance, restriction, airway obstruction, decreased diffusion capacity, and decreases in respiratory muscle strength and endurance, contributes to an inefficient breathing pattern and increased work of breathing. This is further compounded by the limited ability of the failing heart to meet the metabolic demands of the respiratory muscles, leading to underperfusion and ischemia.Although VO2max has important implications with regard to functional capacity, exercise test personnel must be knowledgeable concerning the clinical physiology of ventilation during exercise in the patient with heart failure. Ventilatory markers, as Arena and coworkers have demonstrated, are most indicative of disease severity and enhance the prognostic value of the test results.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call