AI Article Synopsis

  • Prolonged strenuous exercise can temporarily impair cardiac function and lead to pulmonary issues like bronchoconstriction, dynamic hyperinflation, and reduced gas exchange capacity.
  • The study assessed 60 male triathletes before and after a long-distance race to compare cardiac function in those with and without exercise-induced pulmonary dysfunctions.
  • Post-race findings showed declines in both systolic and diastolic functions across all groups, but those with diffusion impairment had more significant decreases in cardiac work and specific heart metrics.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Prolonged strenuous exercise can transiently decrease cardiac function. Other studies have identified three major exercise-induced pulmonary changes: bronchoconstriction, dynamic hyperinflation and pulmonary oedema with reduced alveolar-capillary membrane diffusing capacity. This study investigated whether athletes with one of these pulmonary dysfunctions following a very long-distance triathlon exhibit similar cardiac alterations as those without dysfunctions.

Methods: Sixty trained male triathletes (age 39 ± 9 years) underwent baseline and post-race assessments, including echocardiography (with standard, 2D-strain and myocardial work assessments), spirometry and double-diffusion technique to evaluate alveolar-capillary membrane diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DM). Cardiac function in athletes with exercise-induced bronchoconstriction (> 10% decrease FEV), dynamic hyperinflation (> 10% decrease inspiratory capacity) or impaired diffusion capacity (> 20% decrease DM/alveolar volume) were compared with those without these dysfunctions.

Results: The race lasted 14 h 20 min ± 1 h 26 min. Both systolic and diastolic cardiac functions declined post-race. Post-race, 18% of athletes had bronchoconstriction, 58% dynamic hyperinflation and 40% impaired diffusing capacity. Right and left ventricular standard and 2D-strain parameters were similar before the race in all subgroups and changed similarly post-race, except E/E', which decreased in the bronchoconstriction subgroup and increased in those with diffusion impairment. Global constructive work decreased by ~ 19% post-race (2302 ± 226 versus 1869 ± 328 mmHg%, P < 0.001), more pronounced in athletes with diffusion impairment compared with others (- 26 ± 13 versus - 15 ± 9%, P = 0.001) and positively correlated with DM/alveolar volume reduction.

Conclusion: After a very long-distance triathlon, bronchoconstriction and hyperinflation were not associated with significant cardiac changes, whereas impaired alveolar-capillary membrane diffusing capacity was associated with a more significant decline in myocardial function. These findings highlight the complex relationship between pulmonary gas exchange abnormalities and cardiac fatigue following prolonged strenuous exercise.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40279-024-02128-8DOI Listing

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