Effects of Various Environmental Temperatures on Effort Angina
- 18 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Uppsala Medical Society in Upsala Journal of Medical Sciences
- Vol. 84 (2) , 173-180
- https://doi.org/10.3109/03009737909179153
Abstract
Eleven patients with effort angina and a history of cold intolerance performed short-term bicycle exercise tests at various room temperatures, 20, 10, 0 and −10°C, and a few patients also at −30°C. A significant reduction of maximal working capability (expressed as maximal work load, MWL), limited by moderately severe angina, was found at −10°C (7% ± 1, SEM, P<0.05) compared with normal room temperature. At 0 and 10°C changes of MWL were small and not significant, and at −30°C no further decrease of MWL was seen. About half of the patients, however, showed a tendency toward a decrease in MWL with decreasing environmental temperature, and the decrease in MWL correlated significantly with an increase in rate pressure product (RPP) during exercise at both 0 and −10°C. Thus, the decrease in working capability on exposure to cold could be explained by an increase in heart work. Warming up effects of exercise, counteracting the cold-induced increase in peripheral vascular resistance, were indicated by a diminishing difference in systolic blood pressure between a cold and normal environment with increasing work time.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Response of coronary circulation to cutaneous coldThe American Journal of Medicine, 1974
- Effects of a Reduction in Environmental Temperature on the Circulatory Response to Exercise in ManNew England Journal of Medicine, 1969
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