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  • Title: Improving exercise capacity, 6 wk training tends to reduce circulating endothelin after heart transplantation.
    Author: Doutreleau S, Piquard F, Lonsdorfer E, Rouyer O, Lampert E, Mettauer B, Richard R, Geny B.
    Journal: Clin Transplant; 2004 Dec; 18(6):672-5. PubMed ID: 15516242.
    Abstract:
    Short-term survival is no longer the pivotal issue after heart transplantation but, most heart-transplant (Htx) patients still present with increased circulating endothelin-1 (ET) and reduced exercise capacity. ET-1 limits both exercise-induced vasodilation and blood flow redistribution toward acting muscles and might be accessible to training. This study was performed to investigate the effect of training on ET-1 and whether an eventual training-induced improvement in exercise capacity may be related to reduced baseline or exercise circulating ET-1 in Htx patients. Five Htx patients performed a maximal bicycle exercise test and an endurance exercise test before and after a training program of 18 exercises sessions during 6 wk. ET-1 was determined by radioimmunoassay at rest, end endurance exercise and 30 min recovery, before and after training. Training improved significantly Htx's maximal oxygen uptake (+13.1 +/- 4.8%; p < 0.05) and also reduced significantly the endurance exercise-induced heart rate increase. Resting ET-1 was increased in Htx (5.98 +/- 1.88 vs. 1.61 +/- 0.25 pmol/L in controls; p < 0.01) but although ET-1 modulation might participate in training-induced beneficial effects, training failed to modulate either resting or exercise ET-1 plasma level. Training-induced improvement in exercise capacity might not mainly due to decreased ET-1 after heart transplantation. Further supporting the usefulness of training, these preliminary data suggest that improved exercise capacity may not be mainly due to decreased ET-1 in Htx patients. Further, larger scale studies will be needed to investigate whether an impaired nitric oxide pathway stimulation might explain such results and whether a longer training program can reduce local ET-1, arising from working muscles after heart transplantation.
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