Endothelial dysfunction and exercise performance in lone atrial fibrillation or associated with hypertension or diabetes: different results with cardioversion
- 1 August 2006
- journal article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology
- Vol. 291 (2) , H921-H928
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00986.2005
Abstract
Endothelial dysfunction and underperfusion of exercising muscle contribute to exercise intolerance, hyperventilation, and breathlessness in atrial fibrillation (AF). Cardioversion (CV) improves endothelial function and exercise performance. We examined whether CV is equally beneficial in diabetes and hypertension, diseases that cause endothelial dysfunction and are often associated with AF. Cardiopulmonary exercise and pulmonary and endothelial (brachial artery flow-mediated dilation) function were tested before and after CV in patients with AF alone ( n = 18, group 1 ) or AF with hypertension ( n = 19, group 2 ) or diabetes ( n = 19, group 3 ). Compared with group 1 , peak exercise workload, O2 consumption (V̇o2), O2 pulse, aerobic efficiency (ΔV̇o2/ΔWR), and ratio of brachial diameter changes to flow changes (Δ D /ΔF) were reduced in group 2 and, to a greater extent, in group 3 ; exercise ventilation efficiency (V̇e/V̇co2 slope) and dead space-to-tidal volume ratio (Vd/Vt) were similar among groups. CV had less effect on peak workload (+7% vs. +18%), peak V̇o2 (+12% vs. +17%), O2 pulse (+33% vs. +50%), ΔV̇o2/ΔWR (+7% vs. +12%), V̇e/V̇co2 slope (−6% vs. −12%), Δ D /ΔF (+7% vs. +10%), and breathlessness (Borg scale) in group 2 than in group 1 and was ineffective in group 3 . The antioxidant vitamin C, tested in eight additional patients in each cohort, improved flow-mediated dilation in groups 1 and 2 before, but not after, CV and was ineffective in group 3 , suggesting that the oxidative injury is least in lone AF, greater in hypertension with AF, and greater still in diabetes with AF. Comorbidities that impair endothelial activity worsen endothelial dysfunction and exercise intolerance in AF. The advantages of CV appear to be inversely related to the extent of the underlying oxidative injury.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Myocardial Nox2 Containing NAD(P)H Oxidase Contributes to Oxidative Stress in Human Atrial FibrillationCirculation Research, 2005
- Atrial Fibrillation Increases Production of Superoxide by the Left Atrium and Left Atrial AppendageCirculation, 2005
- Exercise hyperventilation, dyspnea sensation, and ergoreflex activation in lone atrial fibrillationAmerican Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 2004
- Effect of Atrial Fibrillation and an Irregular Ventricular Response on Sympathetic Nerve Activity in Human SubjectsCirculation, 2003
- Diabetes and the heart: compromised myocardial function ? a common challengeEuropean Heart Journal Supplements, 2003
- Downregulation of Endocardial Nitric Oxide Synthase Expression and Nitric Oxide Production in Atrial FibrillationCirculation, 2002
- Impaired endothelial function in arterial hypertension and hypercholesterolemiaJournal Of Hypertension, 2000
- Inhibition of sympathetic vasoconstriction is a major principle of vasodilation by nitric oxide in vivo.Circulation Research, 1994
- Functional capacity before and after cardioversion of atrial fibrillation: a controlled study.Heart, 1994
- RR‐variation: The autonomic test of choice in diabetesDiabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews, 1988