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Supervised exercise training helps patients with heart failure

Technische Universität München News Feb 24, 2017

3,000 steps in 30 minutes improves the prognosis for heart failure.
Contrary to what was previously assumed about patients with heart failure, physical exercise does not lead to harmful ventricular enlargement. Researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim (NTNU) have disproved this earlier hypothesis and issued recommendations for designing a training program for persons with congestive heart failure.

“Previously, congestive heart failure was primarily treated with drugs. The range of treatments was expanded by the use of cardiac pacemakers to optimize heart muscle contraction and the implantation of defibrillators intended to improve myocardial function and prevent sudden cardiac death due to arrhythmia”, explained Professor Martin Halle, Professor of Preventive and Rehabilitative Sports Medicine at TU Munich. Heart failure patients were in fact strictly forbidden from engaging in physical training because of fears that this would further compromise the heart’s pumping function.

However, studies in recent years have already shown that by adding physical training, one can achieve positive effects on endurance and reduce the chances of rehospitalization due to worsening of the symptoms.

For a study conducted in nine European centers and recently published in the journal Circulation investigated the effects of different forms of physical training on a damaged heart. “With this study, we are able to prove that exercise training does not deteriorate dilatation and function of the heart and seems to be safe”, concluded Professor Halle, Medical Director of the TUM Department for Prevention and Sports Medicine.

Between 2009 and 2014, 261 patients with heart failure were assigned to three groups, and over 52 weeks, they underwent different intensities of training. Initially, all three groups underwent supervised training for three months and in addition, they were given the recommendation to continue the intervention for another nine months.

Patients that participated in 12 weeks of regular supervised exercise had better effects than those who just got a recommendation to train on their own. “We actually observed a decrease in the size of the left ventricle, and with it, an improvement in pumping function”, said Professor Halle. “This increased their physical fitness.” The study did not detect any significant differences between a new program of interval training at high intensity and a standard therapy with continuous exercise at moderate intensity. “We actually observed that this training revealed the best improvements and that not exercising was significantly worse regarding pump function and hospitalization”, said Professor Halle. “Overall, this new study underscores how advisable regular physical training at moderate intensity is for patients with systolic heart failure”, Halle concluded – “but I would rather discourage high intensity exercise until larger studies will prove this to be as safe.” The doctor also offered the following concrete tip: Moderate training means around one hundred steps per minute or 3,000 steps in 30 minutes.

The benefits of individualized exercise therapy for cardiac patients include:
  • decreased strain on the heart
  • improvement of the heart muscles function
  • improvement of blood vessels dilation
  • forming of new blood vessels
  • lowering of elevated blood pressure
  • improved oxygen uptake for energy production
  • improved endurance and performance
  • decreased risk of cardiac and vascular emergencies such as heart attack and stroke
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