Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
Health

High-intensity exercise 'safe' in heart transplant patients

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Aug, 2014 06:59 AM
    High-intensity exercise can help stable heart transplant patients reach higher levels of exercise capacity and gain better control of their blood pressure than moderate intensity exercise, a study indicates.
     
    Researchers compared the effects of 12 weeks of high-intensity interval training versus continued moderate training in 16 stable heart transplant recipients who had been living with their new heart for more than one year.
     
    The findings revealed that high-intensity interval training is safe in heart transplant patients and the effect on exercise capacity and blood pressure control is superior to moderate intensity training.
     
    "Our study documents that stable heart transplant recipients benefit from this type of training more than from the moderate training that has been recommended so far," claimed Christian Dall from Bispebjerg Hospital at University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
     
    Importantly, the training is also safe and well received by patients, he added.
     
    The impaired heart rate response has been considered a hindrance for more demanding high-intensity training.
     
    In the study, researchers found that VO2 max, or maximal oxygen uptake, increased by 17 percent in patients performing high-intensity interval training compared with 10 percent in patients performing continued moderate training.
     
    Systolic blood pressure decreased significantly in patients in the high-intensity group, while it remained unchanged in patients in the moderate intensity group.
     
    Peak heart rate also increased in the high-intensity group but not in the moderate intensity group. Heart rate recovery improved in both groups.
     
    The study appeared in the American Journal of Transplantation.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Useful blood gene variants spread in humans worldwide

    Useful blood gene variants spread in humans worldwide
    Two beneficial variants of a gene controlling red blood cells development have spread from Africa into nearly all human populations across the globe, a study reveals....

    Useful blood gene variants spread in humans worldwide

    New genetic risk factors for Parkinson's discovered

    New genetic risk factors for Parkinson's discovered
    In what could lead to new treatment for Parkinson's disease, scientists have identified 24 genetic risk factors involved in the disease, including six that had not...

    New genetic risk factors for Parkinson's discovered

    Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia

    Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia
    A research has found that drugs widely used to treat lung diseases like asthma or pneumonia work better with the body clock....

    Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia

    Healthy lifestyle key for childhood cancer survivors

    Healthy lifestyle key for childhood cancer survivors
    Following a healthy lifestyle may lower childhood cancer survivors' risk of developing the metabolic syndrome, says a study....

    Healthy lifestyle key for childhood cancer survivors

    ECG, blood test must for chest pain sufferers: Study

    ECG, blood test must for chest pain sufferers: Study
    Suffering from chest pain? Do not take it lightly for indigestion or gas pain. Better get an electrocardiogram (ECG) and blood test done to rule out the worst and avoid hospitalisation....

    ECG, blood test must for chest pain sufferers: Study

    Forget injection, pills to cure hardest-to-treat hepatitis C

    Forget injection, pills to cure hardest-to-treat hepatitis C
    On this World Hepatitis Day, there's good news for patients, particularly from India, for those suffering from hepatitis C....

    Forget injection, pills to cure hardest-to-treat hepatitis C