1. Aerobic Training Attenuates Differences Between Black and White Adults in Left Ventricular-Vascular Coupling and Wasted Pressure Effort.
- Author
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Marôco JL, Lane AD, Ranadive SM, Yan H, Baynard T, and Fernhall B
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Blood Pressure physiology, Echocardiography, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Black or African American, Exercise physiology, Ventricular Function, Left physiology, White
- Abstract
Background: Black compared with White adults have a higher risk for left-ventricular hypertrophy and heart failure possibly due to the early onset of alterations in ventricular-vascular coupling (ie, arterial [ E
a ] to ventricular elastance [ Ees ] ratio) and wasted pressure effort ( Ew ). Aerobic training preserves the coupling ratio ( Ea / Ees ) and attenuates Ew , but whether this applies to Black adults is unknown. We hypothesized that Black rather than White adults would have greater training-induced improvements in the Ea / Ees and Ew ., Methods and Results: Fifty-four young adults with normal blood pressure (Black=24 [58% female]; White=30 [47% female], mean=24 years; SD=5 years) completed an 8-week aerobic training (3 times/week, 65%-85% peak oxygen uptake). Ea / Ees was estimated via echocardiography and scaled to body surface area, and the Ew was estimated from pulse contour analysis. Black adults had lower Ea / Ees (difference ( d )=0.49 [95% CI, 0.14-0.84 mm Hg/mL], P =0.007) and higher Ew ( d =1127 [95% CI, 104-2007 dyne cm-2 s], P =0.005). Both groups exhibited similar (race-by-training interaction, P =0.986) training-induced reductions in scaled Ea ( d =-0.11 [95% CI, -0.18 to -0.04 mm Hg/mL], P <0.001). Only in White adults, scaled Ees increased ( dwhite =0.39 [95% CI, 0.11-0.32 mm Hg/mL], P =0.003) and Ea / Ees was reduced ( dwhite =-0.16 [95% CI, -0.33 to -0.18 mm Hg/mL/m2 ], P <0.001). Conversely, only Black adults exhibited reductions in Ew after training ( dblack =-699 [95% CI, -1209 to -189 dyne cm-2 s], P =0.008)., Conclusions: Aerobic training-induced differential effects on Ea / Ees and Ew of White and Black young adults hold the potential to reduce racial disparities. This warrants confirmation in a larger sample., Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT01024634.- Published
- 2024
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