Abstract 14346: High Intensity Exercise Increases Cardiorespiratory Capacity in a Preclinical Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Mouse Model

Autor: Herrera, Jonathan J, Szczesniak, Danielle, Szczesniak, Kate, Gaur, Pranjal, Manzo, Miranda, Goddard, Rose-Carmel, Yob, Jaime, Tardiff, Jil C, Day, Sharlene
Zdroj: Circulation (Ovid); November 2021, Vol. 144 Issue: Supplement 1 pA14346-A14346, 1p
Abstrakt: Introduction:Patients with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM) who possess greater cardiorespiratory capacity (pVO2) are at lower risk for heart transplant and mortality. High intensity exercise (HIE) training used in cardiac rehabilitation for heart failure and cardiovascular disease results in superior increases in pVO2.The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the effects of high intensity interval training (HIIT) on pVO2, as well as cardiac structural and functional parameters known to be altered by exercise in a transgenic cardiac troponin T (TG) HCM mouse model.Methods:Female and male C57BL/6J non-transgenic nTG (n=27) and TG (n=32) mice underwent a translationally parallel cardiac rehabilitation HIIT protocol. One treadmill training bout included 4-4 minute high intensity intervals (~80% preVO2 max speed) interspersed by 5-3 minute recovery intervals (~50% preVO2 max speed) for 31 total minutes. Bouts were repeated 3 times/wk for 6 wks. Pre and post HIIT pVO2and murine echocardiography were measured and analyzed by a blinded technician.Results:Following 6 weeks of the HIIT, nTG female (+13.5 mL/kg/min ± 3.6, p<0.01), nTG male (+13.5 mL/kg/min ± 3.6, p<0.01) and TG female (+7.06 ± 3.3 mL/kg/min, p<0.05) mice demonstrated an average increase in pVO2. TG male mice did not reach statistical significance (+4.34 ± p=0.12). Sedentary female (-15.9 mL/kg/min ± 3.3,p<0.001) and male (-13.1 mL/kg/min ± 3.9, p<0.01) TG control mice experienced a significant decrease in pVO2following the same period, while no change was observed in nTG sedentary controls. Independent of sex, nTG and TG HIIT mice had a significantly greater change in pVO2compared to sedentary counterparts. HIIT training did not result in changes to the following echocardiography measures in either nTG or TG mice: LV mass, LA volume, cardiac output, or stroke volume.Conclusions:Our results indicate that a translationally derived HIIT protocol improves cardiorespiratory capacity in HCM mice, absent of any adverse events or worsening of organ level disease pathology.
Databáze: Supplemental Index