Effect of high-intensity interval training in young heart transplant recipients: results from two randomized controlled trials

Abstract Background Little is known about the effect of exercise in young heart transplant recipients, and results on group level is lacking. This study summarizes the findings of the youngest participants in two previous randomized controlled trials. Method This is a hypothesis-generating study rep...

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Main Authors: Kari Nytrøen, Katrine Rolid, Marianne Yardley, Lars Gullestad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-06-01
Series:BMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13102-020-00180-1
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spelling doaj-a69f8f9f1cb1420890dd38e9ba4895f62020-11-25T03:16:52ZengBMCBMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation2052-18472020-06-011211910.1186/s13102-020-00180-1Effect of high-intensity interval training in young heart transplant recipients: results from two randomized controlled trialsKari Nytrøen0Katrine Rolid1Marianne Yardley2Lars Gullestad3Department of Cardiology, Oslo University Hospital RikshospitaletDepartment of Cardiology, Oslo University Hospital RikshospitaletDepartment of Cardiology, Oslo University Hospital RikshospitaletDepartment of Cardiology, Oslo University Hospital RikshospitaletAbstract Background Little is known about the effect of exercise in young heart transplant recipients, and results on group level is lacking. This study summarizes the findings of the youngest participants in two previous randomized controlled trials. Method This is a hypothesis-generating study reporting the main results from the youngest participants in two larger randomized controlled trials investigating the effect of high-intensity interval training (HIT). The article summarizes the main results from 28 young participants (< 40 year of age) who have participated in two previous studies which evaluated the effect of HIT vs. controls in adult heart transplant recipients. One of the studies included de novo heart transplant recipients and the other included maintenance heart transplant recipients. All study tests were performed in-hospital, in the specialist health care setting, but the exercise intervention was carried out locally, in cooperation with the primary health care. In both studies the exercise intervention lasted for 9–12 months. In one study, HIT (85–95% of peak effort) was compared to controls (no specific intervention), and in the other study HIT was compared to moderate, continuous exercise (MICT, 60–80% of peak effort). The main outcome measure was peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) and a secondary endpoint was muscle strength. Results The summarized findings from the youngest heart transplant recipients in these two studies demonstrated mainly that the improvement in peak oxygen uptake among the younger recipients (< 40 years) was much larger (4.7 vs. 1.2 ml/kg/min and 7.0 vs. 2.2 ml/kg/min) compared to the improvement among the older recipients (≥ 40 years), and in accordance with results from adult heart transplant populations: HIT, compared to MICT, induced the largest improvement in peak oxygen consumption, also in the younger heart transplant recipients. Conclusions These results suggest that young heart transplant recipients have a greater effect of HIT than of MICT and may also suggest that younger recipients benefit more from high-intensity interval training than their older co-patients. However, larger randomized studies focusing on the young heart transplant population is strongly needed to confirm this hypothesis. Trial registration Clinical trial registrations: NCT01796379 and NCT01091194 .http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13102-020-00180-1Heart transplantYoung recipientsRehabilitationHigh-intensity interval trainingCardiopulmonary exercise testPeak oxygen uptake
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kari Nytrøen
Katrine Rolid
Marianne Yardley
Lars Gullestad
spellingShingle Kari Nytrøen
Katrine Rolid
Marianne Yardley
Lars Gullestad
Effect of high-intensity interval training in young heart transplant recipients: results from two randomized controlled trials
BMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation
Heart transplant
Young recipients
Rehabilitation
High-intensity interval training
Cardiopulmonary exercise test
Peak oxygen uptake
author_facet Kari Nytrøen
Katrine Rolid
Marianne Yardley
Lars Gullestad
author_sort Kari Nytrøen
title Effect of high-intensity interval training in young heart transplant recipients: results from two randomized controlled trials
title_short Effect of high-intensity interval training in young heart transplant recipients: results from two randomized controlled trials
title_full Effect of high-intensity interval training in young heart transplant recipients: results from two randomized controlled trials
title_fullStr Effect of high-intensity interval training in young heart transplant recipients: results from two randomized controlled trials
title_full_unstemmed Effect of high-intensity interval training in young heart transplant recipients: results from two randomized controlled trials
title_sort effect of high-intensity interval training in young heart transplant recipients: results from two randomized controlled trials
publisher BMC
series BMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation
issn 2052-1847
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Background Little is known about the effect of exercise in young heart transplant recipients, and results on group level is lacking. This study summarizes the findings of the youngest participants in two previous randomized controlled trials. Method This is a hypothesis-generating study reporting the main results from the youngest participants in two larger randomized controlled trials investigating the effect of high-intensity interval training (HIT). The article summarizes the main results from 28 young participants (< 40 year of age) who have participated in two previous studies which evaluated the effect of HIT vs. controls in adult heart transplant recipients. One of the studies included de novo heart transplant recipients and the other included maintenance heart transplant recipients. All study tests were performed in-hospital, in the specialist health care setting, but the exercise intervention was carried out locally, in cooperation with the primary health care. In both studies the exercise intervention lasted for 9–12 months. In one study, HIT (85–95% of peak effort) was compared to controls (no specific intervention), and in the other study HIT was compared to moderate, continuous exercise (MICT, 60–80% of peak effort). The main outcome measure was peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) and a secondary endpoint was muscle strength. Results The summarized findings from the youngest heart transplant recipients in these two studies demonstrated mainly that the improvement in peak oxygen uptake among the younger recipients (< 40 years) was much larger (4.7 vs. 1.2 ml/kg/min and 7.0 vs. 2.2 ml/kg/min) compared to the improvement among the older recipients (≥ 40 years), and in accordance with results from adult heart transplant populations: HIT, compared to MICT, induced the largest improvement in peak oxygen consumption, also in the younger heart transplant recipients. Conclusions These results suggest that young heart transplant recipients have a greater effect of HIT than of MICT and may also suggest that younger recipients benefit more from high-intensity interval training than their older co-patients. However, larger randomized studies focusing on the young heart transplant population is strongly needed to confirm this hypothesis. Trial registration Clinical trial registrations: NCT01796379 and NCT01091194 .
topic Heart transplant
Young recipients
Rehabilitation
High-intensity interval training
Cardiopulmonary exercise test
Peak oxygen uptake
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13102-020-00180-1
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