AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to understand how forced versus voluntary exercise impacts the cardiovascular system's autonomic modulation in mature rats.
  • During the 10-week period, rats were divided into control, voluntary (with a running wheel), and forced (treadmill) groups, and heart rate variability was analyzed to assess autonomic nervous activity.
  • Results indicated that while the voluntary group exercised more and experienced a decrease in both sympathetic and parasympathetic activity, the forced group had lower heart rates but exhibited stress responses due to treadmill exercise, showing that the type of exercise is crucial for cardiovascular adjustments.

Article Abstract

Objective: To clarify the effects of forced or voluntary exercise on autonomic modulation of the cardiovascular system, we monitored changes in autonomic nervous activity in a mature rat by spectral analysis of the heart rate (HR) during a 10-week training period.

Methods: Male Wistar rats implanted with a radio-telemetry system were divided into three groups at 18 weeks of age: (1) Control group (n = 8); (2) Voluntary group (n = 6), which were housed separately in a cage with a running wheel; (3) Forced group (n = 6), which were exercised on a treadmill (35 m/min, 15 min/day, 5 days/week). The electrocardiogram was analyzed by the maximum entropy method into two main oscillations, low-frequency (LF) and high-frequency (HF) oscillations, respectively. LF and HF are considered to be markers of both sympathetic and parasympathetic modulations and parasympathetic modulation, respectively.

Results: Average running distances of the Voluntary group were more than twofold higher than those of the Forced group. HR levels in the Forced group were lower than those in the Control group. LF and HF levels in the Control and the Forced groups were almost the same during the experiment, and those in the Voluntary group showed a tendency to decrease.

Conclusion: The results in the Voluntary and the Forced groups suggest that cardiovascular adjustments are not simply caused by the quantity of exercise. In the Voluntary group, both sympathetic and parasympathetic activity may decrease with a predominance of sympathetic activity. Conversely, in the Forced group, the baroreflex may be hyper-activated by the undesired treadmill running and handling stress.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3437359PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12199-012-0272-zDOI Listing

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