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Heart rate during exercise: What is the optimal goal of rate adaptive pacemaker therapy?
- Source :
- American Heart Journal. 127:1026-1030
- Publication Year :
- 1994
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 1994.
-
Abstract
- The objective of minute ventilation (MV)-controlled pacemaker algorithms is to simulate the physiologic relationship of the sensed signal and the sinus node response during exercise. In our study we determined the relationship between heart rate and MV in healthy middle-aged subjects by measuring breath-by-breath gas exchange throughout peak exercise. Regarding several clinical limitations of peak exercise testing, we additionally evaluated whether a 35 W low-intensity treadmill exercise (LITE) protocol can be used as a substitute for peak exercise testing to determine the physiologic heart rate to MV slope. The results demonstrated that the heart rate to MV relationship is not linear throughout peak exercise but is curvilinear with a smooth logarithmic-type profile. To simulate this relationship, MV-based rate adaptive pacemakers should generate a decreasing heart rate to MV slope during higher levels of work. The heart rate to MV slope determined during the early, dynamic phase of low-intensity exercise represents the same slope derived from peak exercise below the anaerobic threshold. The low-intensity treadmill exercise protocol, with minimal patient effort, can thus be used as a substitute for peak exercise to optimize rate adaptive slope programming of MV-controlled pacemakers.
- Subjects :
- Male
Pacemaker, Artificial
medicine.medical_specialty
Anaerobic Threshold
Treadmill exercise
Heart Rate
Internal medicine
Heart rate
medicine
Humans
Exercise physiology
Exercise
Sinoatrial Node
Peak exercise
Pulmonary Gas Exchange
business.industry
Work (physics)
Cardiac Pacing, Artificial
Equipment Design
Middle Aged
Decreasing heart rate
Exercise Test
Cardiology
Physical therapy
Female
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
business
Anaerobic exercise
Algorithms
Respiratory minute volume
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00028703
- Volume :
- 127
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- American Heart Journal
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e5d9dc0e03bba2d1277d5e8936963ed3
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0002-8703(94)90082-5