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  • Title: Exercise capacity after heart transplantation: influence of donor and recipient characteristics.
    Author: Renlund DG, Taylor DO, Ensley RD, O'Connell JB, Gilbert EM, Bristow MR, Ma H, Yanowitz FG.
    Journal: J Heart Lung Transplant; 1996 Jan; 15(1 Pt 1):16-24. PubMed ID: 8820079.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: For incompletely understood reasons, cardiac transplant recipients achieve only 60% to 70% of predicted values for maximal exercise capacity. The objective was to determine the characteristics of cardiac transplant recipients that are predictive of exercise capacity. METHODS: One hundred ten patients underwent maximal exercise testing using a modified Naughton protocol 26 +/- 1 months after transplantation. Recipient characteristics, resting hemodynamic variables and exercise parameters were compared using univariate and multivariate analyses. RESULTS: The average maximum heart rate was 85% of predicted, and the average peak oxygen consumption (Vo2) was 17.7 +/- 0.3 ml/kg/min (64% of predicted). Pretransplant status, etiology of heart failure, ischemic time, degree of HLA disparity, cumulative corticosteroid exposure, and number of rejection episodes failed to correlate with any exercise parameter. Older recipient age and female gender were associated with greater values for the proportion of the predicted peak Vo2 (p < 0.001 for age; p = 0.001 for gender). Older donor age was the strongest independent predictor of a decreased chronotropic response (p < 0.001) and was a weak predictor of decreased peak Vo2 (p = 0.014). Even in the multivariate analysis, maintenance prednisone dose negatively impacts exercise duration (p = 0.05), peak Vo2 (p = 0.035) and percent of predicted peak Vo2 (p = 0.032). Of all characteristics tested, pulmonary vascular resistance within 24 hours of exercise most powerfully predicts exercise duration (p = 0.002) and peak Vo2 (p = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Female recipients and older recipients have a lower absolute exercise capacity, but achieve a greater proportion of their predicted capacity. Recipients of older donor hearts and those receiving chronic corticosteroids have decreased exercise capacity. Pulmonary vascular resistance is inversely correlated with exercise capacity.
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