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Clinical Trial
. 1995 May 15;75(15):1042-7.
doi: 10.1016/s0002-9149(99)80721-8.

Cardiopulmonary performance during exercise in acromegaly, and the effects of acute suppression of growth hormone hypersecretion with octreotide

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Cardiopulmonary performance during exercise in acromegaly, and the effects of acute suppression of growth hormone hypersecretion with octreotide

A Giustina et al. Am J Cardiol. .

Abstract

We studied 10 adult patients with active acromegaly (4 men and 6 women, mean age 55 +/- 5 years and mean body mass index 27.9 +/- 1.1 kg/m2). Control values for the echocardiographic and exercise studies were obtained from 10 normal subjects matched for sex and age (5 men and 5 women, age 51.1 +/- 3.7 years and body mass index 25.3 +/- 1 kg/m2). Each patient underwent: (1) blood sampling for growth hormone (GH) assay every 3 hours; (2) a 2-dimensional, guided M-mode echocardiographic study; and (3) a cycloergometric exercise test at baseline and after treatment with a portable pump infusing octreotide, 500 micrograms/24 hours subcutaneously. All patients had left ventricular hypertrophy. Systolic function indexes did not significantly differ among normal subjects, whereas baseline Doppler studies showed abnormalities in left ventricular diastolic filling in acromegalic patients. At anaerobic threshold and at maximal exercise, acromegalic subjects sustained a significantly (p < 0.05) decreased workload (54 +/- 23 vs 94 +/- 11 and 87 +/- 37 vs 152 +/- 15 W) compared with control subjects. After octreotide, baseline heart rate (79 +/- 7 vs 87 +/- 8 beats/min, p < 0.05) and serum GH levels significantly decreased compared with levels before administration of octreotide. Systolic and diastolic functional indexes at rest significantly improved after octrotide in acromegalic patients. Both at anaerobic threshold and at maximal exercise, workload and oxygen consumption were significantly increased after octretide administration. Exercise capacity at anaerobic threshold was not significantly different in acromegalic subjects after octreotide when compared with normal subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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