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Circulation, Vol 90, 2701-2709, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
SS Lele, G Scalia, H Thomson, D Macfarlane, D Wilkinson, W Stafford, F Khafagi and M Frenneaux
BACKGROUND: Exercise-induced hypotension in patients with coronary artery
disease (CAD) has been considered to be due to an inability to achieve an
adequate increase in cardiac output to match the demands of exercise. We
investigated 10 consecutive patients (9 men and 1 woman; age, 38 to 71
years; mean, 52 years) with angiographically documented CAD and
exercise-induced hypotension (EIH) (BPPeak < BPRest). Ten approximately
age- and sex-matched patients with documented CAD and normal exercise blood
pressure response (NBP) served as control subjects. METHODS AND RESULTS:
Nine patients with EIH and all 10 control subjects underwent forearm
plethysmography and radionuclide ventriculography (RNV) during semierect
cycle exercise. Forearm vascular resistance (FVR) fell by 35 +/- 21% in
exercise-induced hypotension patients versus an increase of 78 +/- 65% in
patients with an NBP response (P < .0001). Left ventricular ejection
fraction increased by 5.1 +/- 7.5% in the group with EIH versus a fall of
4.1 +/- 6.2% in the control group (P = .004). Cardiac output at peak
exercise (RNV) increased by 2.2 +/- 0.89-fold in the group with EIH versus
1.49 +/- 0.47-fold in the control group (P = .04). The tenth patient in the
group with EIH underwent invasive hemodynamic evaluation during erect
exercise. Systolic blood pressure fell (136/80Rest to 50/40Peak) and
cardiac output (Fick) tripled, whereas calculated systemic vascular
resistance decreased by a factor of 10. Successful angioplasty to an
isolated circumflex lesion resulted in resolution of symptoms and abnormal
hemodynamic responses during exercise. CONCLUSIONS: Abnormal vasodilation
associated with a normal or even increased rather than decreased cardiac
output response appears to be an important mechanism underlying EIH in some
patients with CAD. In the present study, this appears to have been the
dominant mechanism in 8 and contributory in 2 of the consecutive patients
studied.
ARTICLES
Mechanism of exercise hypotension in patients with ischemic heart disease. Role of neurocardiogenically mediated vasodilation
Department of Cardiology, Australia.
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