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Original Research |
Valério Garrone Barauna, MSc, School of Physical Education and Sports, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
Kaleizu Teodoro Rosa, MSc, Heart Institute (InCor), University of São Paulo, Medical School, São Paulo, Brazil
Maria Cláudia Irigoyen, PhD, Heart Institute (InCor), University of São Paulo, Medical School, São Paulo, Brazil
Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira, PhD, School of Physical Education and Sports, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
Reprint Requests: Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira, PhD, Laboratory of Biochemistry, School of Physical Education and Sport, Av. Prof. Mello Moraes, 65, 05508-900, Butantã, Cidade Universitária, São Paulo, SP-Brazil, Tel: 55-11-3091-3136, Fax: 55-11-3813-5921, Email: edilamar{at}usp.br
Received: June 12, 2006.
Revised: December 10, 2006.
Accepted: January 18, 2007.
| Abstract |
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Design: Forty animals were divided into two major groups: control (n=16) and resistance trained (n=24). From the resistance-trained group, 12 animals were resistance trained for 1 month and another 12 for 3 months. The resistance-training protocol was performed with 4 sets of 12 repetitions using 65% to 75% of one repetition maximum (maximum lifted weight with the exercise apparatus).
Methods: Echocardiographic analysis was performed at the beginning of the resistance-training period and at the end of each month. The repetition maximum was measured every 2 weeks. Cardiac hypertrophy was determined by echocardiography, by the absolute weight of the cardiac chambers and by histology of the left ventricle.
Results: Before resistance training, both groups had similar repetition maximums, ranging from 1.8-fold to 2-fold the body weight; however, at the end of the resistance-training period, the repetition maximum of the resistance-trained group was 6-fold greater than the body weight. The left ventricular mass as assessed by echocardiography was 8%, 12% and 16% larger in the resistance-trained group than in the control group in the first, second and third months, respectively. This hypertrophy showed a similar increase in the interventricular septum and in the free posterior wall mass. There was no reduction in the end-diastolic left ventricular internal diameter during the 3-month resistance-training period. Systolic function did not differ between the groups throughout the resistance-training period.
Conclusion: Resistance training induces the development of concentric cardiac hypertrophy without ventricular dysfunction or cavity reduction. Although diastolic function was not completely investigated, we cannot exclude the possibility that resistance training results in diastolic dysfunction.
Key Words: Cardiac hypertrophy Echocardiography Resistance training
Resistance training, also known as weight or strength training, is a specialized method of conditioning designed to increase muscle strength, muscle endurance and muscle power. In response to this kind of training, both skeletal and cardiac muscle adapts. The main muscle adaptation of the athletes body is the increase in size or mass (hypertrophy) of type II skeletal muscle cells1 and cardiac hypertrophy. However, different from hypertensive conditions when pressure overload is continuous, the cardiovascular response to this exercise model is characterized by the intermittent increase in blood pressure during exercise.2
Due to the pressure overload during exercise, practitioners of modalities such as weight training develop a cardiac hypertrophy different from those practitioners of sports with a high dynamic component (e.g., running). This hypertrophy is characterized by increases in the left ventricular (LV) wall and no changes in the diameter of the LV cavity in diastole. Thus, these athletes are presumed to develop concentric LV hypertrophy characterized by an increased ratio of wall thickness to radius.3,4 The increase in wall thickness induced by pressure-overload is mainly due to an increase in the myocyte cross-sectional area.5
Cardiac hypertrophy might also result from pressure overload observed in many pathologic conditions such as hypertension. However, this kind of hypertrophy is followed by diastolic or systolic dysfunction and a disproportionate increase in the thickness of the LV posterior wall and interventricular septum.6,7 Moreover, similar adaptations are usually found in athletes who use anabolic steroids associated with resistance training.7,8
Although several authors35 have studied the impact of different sports on cardiac structure, a follow-up study using an animal model has not been used yet to study adaptive changes in resistance training. We chose to focus on the resistance-trained heart to investigate echocardiographic data, such as the association of LV mass with myocyte thickness and heart weight, and to investigate changes in ventricular function in rats undergoing resistance training for a period of 1 and 3 months.
| Methods |
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Animals were exercised following a model described by Tamaki et al.9 Rats fitted with a canvas jacket were able to regulate the twisting and flexing of their torsos and were suspended in a standard position on their hind limbs. An electrical stimulation (20 V, 0.3 sec duration at 3 sec intervals) was applied to the rats tail through a surface electrode. As a result, the rats flexed their legs repeatedly, which lifted the weight-arm of the training apparatus. Twelve animals from the trained group were exercised with 4 sets of 12 repetitions each with a 90 sec rest period between each set, 5 times per week for 4 weeks, and the remaining animals in the group were exercised for 12 weeks. This exercise program started after 2 weeks of adaptation. After measurement of the maximum weight lifted (1 repetition maximum) with the squat-training apparatus, the training load was set at 65% to 75% of 1 repetition maximum. All training sessions were performed in a dark room. The maximum power generated for jumping in rats (1 repetition maximum) was defined as the maximum load that the rats were able to jump following electrical stimulation, and was measured biweekly.
Echocardiography
Echocardiographic features were obtained under the recommendations of the American Society of Echocardiography.10 Transthoracic echocardiography was performed before the training and every 30 days until the end of the third month, and by only one observer using Sequoia 512 equipment (ACUSON Corporation, Mountain View, CA) and a 10 to 14 MHz multifrequency linear transducer. Images were obtained with the transducer placed on the animals shaved chest (lateral recumbence). To optimize the image, a transmission gel was used between the transducer and the animals chest (general imaging gel, ATL Inc., Reedsville, PA). Animals were scanned from below at a depth of 2 cm with the focus optimized at 1 cm. All measurements were performed by the same observer based on the average of 3 consecutive cardiac cycles. Rats were anesthetized with halothane (0.75% to 1.25%, 1 L/min). Wall thickness and LV dimensions were obtained from a short-axis view at the level of the papillary muscles. LV mass was calculated by the use of the following formula, assuming a spherical LV geometry and validated in rats: LV mass=1,047x[(LVd+PWd+IWd)3-LVd3], where 1,047 is the specific gravity of muscle, LVd is LV end-diastolic diameter and PWd and IWd are end-diastolic posterior and interseptum wall thickness, respectively. LV shortening was calculated as (LVd-LVs)/LVdx100, where LVs is LV end-systolic diameter. LV ejection fraction was calculated according to the Teichholz formula. Two-dimensionally guided pulsed Doppler recordings of LV transmitral flow were obtained from the apical 4-chamber view. Isovolumic relaxation time was taken as the time from aortic valve closure to the onset of mitral flow. Velocity of circumferential shortening was measured using the formula (LVd-LVs)/(LvdxET), where ET is the ejection time.
Morphological Analysis
The hearts were excised and perfused through the aortic stump from a reservoir located 70 cm above the heart and kept at room temperature. All hearts were initially perfused with 10 ml of phosphate buffered saline to wash out the blood, and after the hearts were stopped at diastole by perfusion with 14 mM KCl. The left ventricle was obtained as that remaining after removal of both atria and the free wall of the right ventricle. Afterwards, the cardiac chamber was weighed.
For histological analysis, the left ventricle was fixed in 6% formaldehyde and embedded in paraffin, cut into 5 µm sections at the level of the papillary muscle and subsequently stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Two randomly selected sections from each animal were visualized by light microscopy using an oil immersion objective with a calibrated magnification (400X). Myocytes with visible nuclei and intact cellular membranes were chosen for diameter determination. The width of individually isolated cardiomyocytes displayed on a viewing screen was manually t raced across the middle of the nuclei with a digitizing pad and determined by a computer-assisted image analysis system (Quantimet 520, Cambridge Instruments, Cambridge, UK). For each animal, approximately 20 visual fields were analyzed.
Statistical Analysis
All data are expressed as mean ± standard deviation (SD). Differences among groups (left ventricle, right ventricle and atrium weight) were assessed by the Student t test. All other statistical comparisons were performed by a randomized repeated measure 1-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). When a significant difference was detected, comparisons were carried out by Tukeys post-hoc test. P<0.05 was considered statistically significant.
| Results |
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Cardiac Structure by Echocardiography
The mean relative LV wall thickness of the control group was significantly smaller than that of the trained group in the second and third month. This may indicate the development of concentric hypertrophy. Results from the echocardiography studies are summarized in table 2
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LV mass of the control rats was significantly smaller than the mean LV mass of the trained rats starting in the second month (11.7% and 16.7% in the second and third month, respectively, both P<0.05) (table 2
). However, in the first month, no significant difference was found; the LV mass only showed a slight increase (8%).
Cardiac Morphology by Absolute Weight and Histology
A similar percentage of cardiac hypertrophy was found in the absolute LV weight (figure 2
) (7.6% in the first month, P>0.05; and 13.9%, P<0.05 in the third month). No difference was found in the right ventricle or in the atrium weights. The increase in LV weight was further confirmed by increases of 8.3% and 14.1% in the LV myocyte width in the first and the third month, respectively, when control rats were compared with trained rats (figure 3
).
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| Discussion |
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Repetition Maximum
To characterize training efficiency, repetition maximum was used as an index. Additionally, the maximum strength achieved by the rats was used to determine the training load and to demonstrate training development. As in aerobic training, where maximum heart rate or VO2max are used to prescribe exercise,11 repetition maximum is used in resistance training for prescription.12 Also, as previously demonstrated, results from our laboratory showed that this protocol is unaffected by the electrical stimulation.13
The results shown here are similar to results from other studies that used the same training apparatus.14 The increase in strength may have two origins, neural and muscular, as proposed by Moritani and deVries.15 They proposed that neural adaptations dominate early in the training program. Later, as neural adaptations reach a plateau, muscular adaptations (hypertrophy) dominate.
Cardiac Structure and LV Mass
Concerning cardiac structure of the athletes heart, two different morphological forms may be distinguished. In sports with high dynamic and low static demand, eccentric hypertrophy predominates, while in strength training concentric hypertrophy is predominant.3 Fagard16,17 observed that athletes engaged in static training had LV dimension increased 2.5% and LV wall thickness increased 12% compared with that in non-athletes. In addition, Dickerman et al18 demonstrated that LV wall thickness >13 mm can be found routinely in elite resistance-trained athletes, and the use of anabolic steroids concomitant with resistance training does appear to augment LV mass. Normal or a slight increase in LV internal diameter and a large increase in LV wall thickness are commonly explained on the basis of the acute increase in blood pressure during resistance training.19,20
Also resistance-trained individuals have both the posterior LV wall thickness and intraventricular septum wall thickness greater than average.17,21 However, these values do not exceed the limits of normal values, different from those observed in pathologic conditions, such as aortic stenosis, obstructive cardiomyopathy and hypertension.7,20 Therefore, the increase in the wall thickness is not a required result of all resistance training programs, and the conflicting results in the literature are probably due to differences in sex, age or in the training protocols used, including muscle mass involved, exercise intensity, rest periods between sets and training volume.22 Haykowsky et al21 have recently attributed this disparity between studies of whether resistance training consistently results in cardiac hypertrophy to three reasons: (1) acute cardiopulmonary mechanisms that minimize the increase in transmural pressure and LV wall stress during exercise, (2) the underlying use of anabolic steroids by the athletes, or (3) the specific type of resistance training performed. We believe that this exercise model may be a useful tool to unravel this discrepancy in an animal model, where the use of anabolic steroids and the type of resistance training may be precisely controlled and the cardiac ultra-structure further investigated.
Changes in the LV internal diameter in most cases are not significantly different from normal.3,4,7,16,23,24 Although resistance training may have some effect on LV internal diameter, it is not reduced due to the pressure overload as in hypertension or other forms of induced cardiomyopathy pressure-overload.7
As observed above, LV mass can increase due to an increase in either ventricular wall thickness or internal dimensions. The latter is frequently observed when the primary stimulus i s the volume overload. Increased end-diastolic wall stress leads to series replication of sarcomeres, fiber elongations, chamber enlargement and eccentric hypertrophy. Acute increase in peak systolic wall stress (pressure overload) leads to parallel replication of sarcomeres, wall thickening and concentric hypertrophy.5,25,26 Both cross-sectional studies and short-term longitudinal studies3,17,21 indicate that the absolute LV mass increases significantly due to resistance training. The similarities in the results among the three different methods of analysis of LV hypertrophy demonstrate that echocardiography is a reliable method to evaluate it also in the animal model.
Cardiac Function
LV systolic function is generally assessed in echocardiographic studies by measuring the extent of fiber shortening, ejection fraction and velocity of circumferential fiber shortening,27 while diastolic function is assessed by studying the pattern of ventricular filling through the mitral valve.28 Abnormalities in systolic and diastolic function are generally associated with cardiac hypertrophy induced by pathological conditions, such as hypertension and valvular disease.7,29 Our results of systolic function are in agreement with those in the literature where reports demonstrate that cardiac function is not altered in resistance-trained individuals.3,4,7 However, to the best of our knowledge, only two studies indicate an enhanced systolic function.30,31 One study indicated enhanced diastolic function, reporting that atrial peak-filling rate is greater in power lifters than in non-power lifters.32
| Clinical Implications of the Study |
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Recent studies34,35 indicate that endothelial dysfunction in coronary and also peripheral arteries predicts cardiovascular events; however, the mechanisms responsible for the benefits of resistance training on endothelial function are controversial. It is not clear, however, whether the beneficial effects of resistance training on endothelial function are a consequence of improvements in risk factors (serum lipid concentration, blood pressure, obesity or glycemic control) induced by resistance training or to some other mechanisms. However, Green et al36 show that the benefits of resistance training on vascular function are not solely mediated by the effects of exercise on cardiovascular risk factors. An explanation for the effect of exercise training on vasculature function is that exercise exerts direct effects on the vasculature by increasing shear stress that increases vascular nitric oxide production. Vascular function might be considered a useful independent measure of atherosclerotic disease risk.34,35 According to recent studies, combined endurance and resistance training or resistance training alone should be recommended as a safe and effective alternative training mode in order to counteract peripheral maladaptation and improve muscle strength necessary for daily activities, and thus improve the quality of life of congestive heart failure patients.
| Study Limitations |
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| Conclusion |
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In conclusion, our results suggest that resistance training induces concentric cardiac hypertrophy without systolic dysfunction or reduction in the ventricular cavity. The similarities between previous reports having humans as subjects and our findings indicate that the model may be used for further studies concerning the development of physiological and pathological concentric cardiac hypertrophy.
| Acknowledgments |
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| References |
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V. G. Barauna, F. C. Magalhaes, J. E. Krieger, and E. M. Oliveira AT1 receptor participates in the cardiac hypertrophy induced by resistance training in rats Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, August 1, 2008; 295(2): R381 - R387. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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