Comparative Effects of Aging and Coronary Heart Disease on Submaximal and Maximal Exercise
- 1 June 1969
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 39 (6), 759-774
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.39.6.759
Abstract
The relative contributions of aging and coronary heart disease to the impairment of functional capacity were assessed in 117 coronary patients, 117 age-matched healthy middle-aged men, and 62 healthy young men by utilizing a multistage treadmill test of maximal exercise. With aging alone, duration of exertion and maximal exercise heart rate were diminished while maximal systolic pressure increased. The percentage of heart rate reserve from submaximal (stage 1) to maximal exercise was unaltered so that the relative heart rate stress of submaximal work on the heart was not affected. Transient postexertional S-T depression was related to increasing age and high cardiac work loads. With coronary disease, maximal duration, maximal heart rate, maximal systolic pressure, and heart rate difference (maximal heart rate during exercise minus resting heart rate just before exercise) were all reduced, while the relative heart rate stress of submaximal exercise was greater. The frequency of S-T depression was both age and disease dependent. Postexertional S-T depression of myocardial ischemia was prolonged and usually associated with angina in patients with coronary occlusive disease and subnormal performance in contrast to a more transient painless response which occurred in healthy subjects with performance which was "supernormal" in comparison with normals who exhibited no S-T depression.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- A hemodynamic study of acute coronary insufficiency precipitated by exerciseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1966
- Myocardial ischemia after maximal exercise in healthy menAmerican Heart Journal, 1965
- Hemodynamic Responses to Exercise in Clinically Normal Middle-aged Men and in Those with Angina Pectoris *Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1964
- Relationships Between Cardiac Output, Stroke Volume and Intracardiac Pressures at Rest and During Exercise in Supine Position and Some Anthropometric Data in Healthy Old MenActa Medica Scandinavica, 1964
- Circulation in Healthy Old Men, Studied by Right Heart Catheterization at Rest and During Exercise in Supine and Sitting PositionActa Medica Scandinavica, 1964
- The postexercise electrocardiogram∗The American Journal of Cardiology, 1962
- HAeMODYNAMIC CONSEQUENCES OF CORONARY HEART DISEASE WITH OBSERVATIONS DURING ANGINAL PAIN AND ON THE EFFECT OF NITROGLYCERINEHeart, 1958
- THE PHYSIOLOGICAL MEANING OF THE MAXIMAL OXYGEN INTAKE TEST1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1958
- ENERGY COST OF THE MASTER TWO-STEP TESTJAMA, 1957
- Studies on the Effect of Exercise on Cardiovascular FunctionCirculation, 1954