Benefits of exercise training in chronic heart failure.

Jean-Yves Tabet, Philippe Meurin, Ahmed Ben Driss, Hélène Weber, Nathalie Renaud, Anne Grosdemouge, Florence Beauvais, Alain Cohen-Solal
Author Information
  1. Jean-Yves Tabet: Centre de réadaptation cardiaque de la Brie, 27, rue Sainte-Christine, 77174 Villeneuve-Saint-Denis, France. jtabet@free.fr

Abstract

Exercise training performed in cardiac rehabilitation centres is an adjuvant therapy in chronic heart failure patients with left ventricular dysfunction; it decreases the deleterious consequences of chronic heart failure. Exercise training attenuates neurohormonal stimulation, the production of proinflammatory cytokines and natriuretic peptide overexpression. Trained patients showed a significant decrease in the peripheral organ injuries encountered in chronic heart failure, with a reduction in vascular resistance and improvements in endothelial dysfunction and the oxidative capacity of peripheral muscles, without a deleterious effect on left ventricular remodelling. Ultimately, exercise training leads to a notable improvement in ventilatory capacity. These beneficial effects are accompanied by improvements in symptoms at rest, exercise capacity and quality of life. Several training programmes are in current use: exercise training sessions always include endurance exercise performed either at a constant load intensity or with interval training, combining periods of exercise performed at high intensity with periods performed at low intensity. Most of the time, training programmes also include resistance training sessions, which improves large muscle strength. Exercise training programmes seem to have a favourable effect on prognosis, even if the results of Heart Failure: a Controlled Trial Investigating Outcomes of Exercise Training (HF-ACTION) remain controversial, emphasizing the difficulty in monitoring observance and the importance of compliance with a long-term exercise training programme. Patients who do not improve their exercise capacity significantly after an exercise training programme have a poorer prognosis.

MeSH Term

Chronic Disease
Exercise Therapy
Exercise Tolerance
Heart Failure
Hemodynamics
Humans
Quality of Life
Recovery of Function
Resistance Training
Respiratory Mechanics
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
Ventricular Function, Left

Word Cloud

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