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Ventilatory Efficiency Is Reduced in People With Hypertension During Exercise.

Katrina HopeBen ChantThomas HintonAdrian H KendrickAngus K NightingaleJulian F R PatonEmma C Hart
Published in: Journal of the American Heart Association (2023)
Background An elevated ventilatory efficiency slope during exercise (minute ventilation/volume of expired CO 2 ; V E /VCO 2 slope) is a strong prognostic indicator in heart failure. It is elevated in people with heart failure with preserved ejection, many of whom have hypertension. However, whether the V E /VCO 2 slope is also elevated in people with primary hypertension versus normotensive individuals is unknown. We hypothesize that there is a spectrum of ventilatory inefficiency in cardiovascular disease, reflecting an increasingly abnormal physiological response to exercise. The aim of this study was to evaluate the V E /VCO 2 slope in patients with hypertension compared with age-, peak oxygen consumption-, and sex-matched healthy subjects. Methods and Results Ramped cardiovascular pulmonary exercise tests to peak oxygen consumption were completed on a bike ergometer in 55 patients with primary hypertension and 24 normotensive controls. The V E /VCO 2 slope was assessed from the onset of exercise to peak oxygen consumption. Data were compared using unpaired Student t test. Age (mean±SD, 66±6 versus 64±6 years; P =0.18), body mass index (25.4±3.5 versus 24±2.4 kg/m 2 ; P =0.13), and peak oxygen consumption (23.2±6.6 versus 24±7.3 mL/min per kg; P =0.64) were similar between groups. The V E /VCO 2 slope was elevated in the hypertensive group versus controls (31.8±4.5 versus 28.4±3.4; P =0.002). Only 27% of the hypertensive group were classified as having a normal V E /VCO 2 slope (20-30) versus 71% in the control group. Conclusions Ventilatory efficiency is impaired people with hypertension without a diagnosis of heart failure versus normotensive individuals. Future research needs to establish whether those patients with hypertension with elevated V E /VCO 2 slopes are at risk of developing future heart failure.
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