1. Effect of exercise-heat acclimation on cardiac autonomic modulation in type 2 diabetes: a pilot study.
- Author
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Macartney MJ, Notley SR, Herry CL, Sigal RJ, Boulay P, and Kenny GP
- Subjects
- Aged, Electrocardiography, Heart physiology, Heart Rate, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Acclimatization, Autonomic Nervous System physiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 physiopathology, Exercise, Heat-Shock Response
- Abstract
The effects of exercise-heat acclimation on heart rate variability (HRV) in individuals with type 2 diabetes (T2D) remains unclear. We assessed electrocardiogram recordings during exercise-heat stress in middle-aged-to-older individuals (50-70 years) with ( n = 6) and without (control; n = 8;) T2D, before and after 7 days of exercise-heat acclimation. Exercising heart rate was reduced (control, -9 ± 5 bpm; T2D, -14 ± 9 bpm) yet HRV was not significantly different. Given the negative correlations between diminished HRV and cardiac risk observed in the scientific literature, further research is warranted. Novelty: Our observations indicate that 7 days exercise-heat acclimation may not effectively attenuate the deviation toward reduced overall HRV and unfavourable cardiac autonomic modulation in individuals with T2D.
- Published
- 2021
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