Training-induced bradycardia and intrinsic heart rate in rats

Abstract
After 10 weeks of treadmill training, female Sprague-Dawley rats had developed a bradycardia at exercise on submaximal work loads. This bradycardia was also present after autonomic denervation and in isolated perfused heart preparations. The heart weight/body weight ratio was increased in these trained animals compared to untrained littermates. Sympathectomized, trained rats developed the same degree of cardiac hypertrophy, but their heart rate after denervation and in the isolated heart was the same as in Sympathectomized, untrained rats. It is concluded that the bradycardia of trained and thereafter denervated animals seen in this and a previous investigation represents an adaptation within the heart itself, since it was present in the isolated heart. These results thus provide further evidence for a non-neural component in training-induced bradycardia. Since the trained Sympathectomized rats had a cardiac hypertrophy but no reduction of intrinsic heart rate, it seems likely that the myocardial mass is of minor importance for the level of intrinsic heart rate.