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Effects of long-term exercise training on cardiac autonomic nervous activities and baroreflex sensitivity.

Reductions in tonic vagal controls of the heart and depressed baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) have been associated with a postural fall in blood pressure (BP) and the incidence of cardiac events among older people. We examined the hypothesis that BP regulation during orthostatic challenge as well as heart rate variability (HRV) at rest can be better maintained in long-term exercise-trained, healthy, older men (aged 60-70 years). Subjects were classified into two groups; long-term exercise-trained (LTET, n=14) and sedentary (SED, n=10) according to their history of physical activity. Prior to the dynamic BRS assessment, supine resting autonomic cardiac modulation was assessed by means of time domain HRV [standard deviation of ECG R-R interval (RRISD) and the coefficient of variation (CV)]. The BRS was assessed during 60 degrees head-up tilting by simultaneously measuring beat-by-beat systolic blood pressure (SBP) and ECG R-R interval changes. The BRS gain was determined by the regression slope coefficient based on the extent of the SBP fall and the corresponding ECG R-R shortening during the orthostatic challenge. The results indicated that the LTET group manifested greater ECG R-R interval fluctuations with significantly higher resting RRISD and CV, compared with the SED group [59.5 (10.4) versus 27.7 (7.8) ms, p<0.05; 5.5 (0.8) versus 2.8 (0.7)%, p<0.05], respectively. Using dynamic BRS testing during the acute orthostatic challenge, the LTET group showed a significantly higher BRS gain than the SED [6.4 (0.8) versus 3.8 (0.6) ms x mmHg(-1), p<0.017] group. These results indicate that CV and BRS are well maintained in healthy, LTET older individuals when compared with their sedentary peers. Our data suggest that this augmented autonomic cardiac modulation reflects better parasympathetic responsiveness in LTET individuals. Data provide further support for long-term exercise training as another possible cardioprotective factor that might decrease susceptibility to ventricular fibrillation as well as assist arterial BP at the onset of an orthostatic challenge in older men.

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