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. 2007 Mar;9(3):310-6.
doi: 10.1016/j.ejheart.2006.07.001. Epub 2006 Oct 4.

Changes in exercise capacity, ventilation, and body weight following heart transplantation

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Free article

Changes in exercise capacity, ventilation, and body weight following heart transplantation

Dirk Habedank et al. Eur J Heart Fail. 2007 Mar.
Free article

Abstract

Aims: Peak oxygen uptake adjusted to body weight (peak VO(2)) and ventilatory efficiency (VE/VCO(2)-slope) are important prognostic parameters in chronic heart failure. Our study prospectively examined changes in these parameters over 24 months following heart transplantation (HTx) and evaluated the potentially confounding effects of weight gain.

Methods and results: One hundred patients with chronic heart failure (16 female, mean age at HTx 53.9+/-9.6 years) underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing before and 3, 6, 12 and/or 24 months after HTx. Twenty-five healthy individuals served as matched normals. VE/VCO(2)-slope during exercise improved significantly at 6 (-23.7%), 12 (-21.3%), and 24 months (-32.3%; all p<0.002 vs. baseline). At 6 months, VE/VCO(2)-slopes were similar to the matched normals (31.8+/-4.3), 46 of 78 patients achieved values within the 95% confidence interval of normal. Peak VO(2) increased significantly after HTx at 6 (+31.8%), 12 (+36.2%), and 24 months (+42.2%; all p<0.005). None of the patients reached values within the 95% CI of normal. Although VE/VCO(2)-slope and peak VO(2) were correlated inversely at every time point (p<0.03), reduction in VE/VCO(2)-slope did not correlate with increase in peak VO(2). Symptoms that limited exercise changed from dyspnoea before HTx to leg fatigue after HTx.

Conclusion: Following HTX, VE/VCO(2)-slope returns to normal values in the majority of patients; however, despite improvement, peak VO(2) remains abnormal in all patients. Symptoms causing patients to stop exercising change from dyspnoea to leg fatigue.

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