Too much exercise may speed heart failure
Reported
August 16, 2007
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Though exercise
can be a key part of managing high blood pressure and heart disease, new animal
research suggests there can be too much of a good thing.
In experiments with rats, researchers found that excessive exercise worsened
high blood pressure and progression to heart failure in rats with high blood
pressure.
Dr. Rebecca L. Schultz and colleagues at the University of South Dakota, Sioux
Falls, report the results in the journal Hypertension.
Regular physical activity has been linked to a lower risk of heart disease in
numerous studies. Moreover, exercise therapy has been shown to improve both
blood pressure and symptoms of heart failure -- a chronic condition in which the
heart loses its ability to pump blood efficiently, causing symptoms like
breathlessness and fatigue.
The new findings in rats are, therefore, unexpected, according to an editorial
published with the study.
The implications for humans are not yet certain, according to the editorialists
Dr. Paul Christian Schulze, of Boston University Medical Center, and Satyam
Sarma, of Brown University Medical Center in Providence, Rhode Island. However,
the findings "should raise our awareness" of the potential harm intense exercise
might do to people with untreated high blood pressure.
Humans, as well as rats, develop high blood pressure that can progress to heart
failure. In the current study, some of the animals were housed with a running
wheel, while the others remained sedentary.
Schultz and her colleagues found that the rats that lived with a running wheel
tended to exercise excessively. The results, over time, were structural
abnormalities in the heart and a reduced pumping ability -- all of which were
worse in the active animals than in the sedentary ones.
The reasons for the findings are unclear, according to the study authors, but
it's likely that the rats "simply exercised too much."
The study raises the possibility that "uncontrolled and excessive exercise" may
negatively affect the heart in people with high blood pressure, potentially
speeding the onset of heart failure, according to Sarma and Schulze.
One of the questions for future studies, they note, is whether this is true
among people whose blood pressure is under control with medication.
"Defining the fine line between beneficial and detrimental effects of exercise
requires further study," the editorialists conclude.
SOURCE: Hypertension, August 2007. |