4.4 Article

Biventricular function in exercise during autonomic (thoracic epidural) block

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 121, Issue 5, Pages 1405-1418

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00421-021-04631-6

Keywords

Ventricular function, right; Ventricular function, left; Circulation; Anesthesia; Epidural; Nervous system; Autonomic; Exercise

Funding

  1. Department of Anesthesiology, LUMC

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The study showed that thoracic epidural anesthesia can reduce systolic function of both left and right ventricles, as well as heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, and mean arterial pressure, but has minimal effect on diastolic function. Exercise can increase both systolic and diastolic biventricular function, resulting in higher heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, and mean arterial pressure, while decreasing systemic vascular resistance.
Background Blockade of cardiac sympathetic fibers by thoracic epidural anesthesia (TEA) was previously shown to reduce right and left ventricular systolic function and effective pulmonary arterial elastance. At conditions of constant paced heart rate, cardiac output and systemic hemodynamics were unchanged. In this study, we further investigated the effect of cardiac sympathicolysis during physical stress and increased oxygen demand. Methods In a cross-over design, 12 patients scheduled to undergo thoracic surgery performed dynamic ergometric exercise tests with and without TEA. Hemodynamics were monitored and biventricular function was measured by transthoracic two-dimensional and M-mode echocardiography, pulsed wave Doppler and tissue Doppler imaging. Results TEA attenuated systolic RV function (TV SMODIFIER LETTER PRIME: - 21%, P < 0.001) and LV function (MV SMODIFIER LETTER PRIME: - 14%, P = 0.025), but biventricular diastolic function was not affected. HR (- 11%, P < 0.001), SVI (- 15%, P = 0.006), CI (- 21%, P < 0.001) and MAP (- 12%, P < 0.001) were decreased during TEA, but SVR was not affected. Exercise resulted in significant augmentation of systolic and diastolic biventricular function. During exercise HR, SVI, CI and MAP increased (respectively, + 86%, + 19%, + 124% and + 17%, all P < 0.001), whereas SVR decreased (- 49%, P < 0.001). No significant interactions between exercise and TEA were found, except for RPP (P = 0.024) and MV E DT (P = 0.035). Conclusion Cardiac sympathetic blockade by TEA reduced LV and RV systolic function but did not significantly blunt exercise-induced increases in LV and RV function. These data indicate that additional mechanisms besides those controlled by the cardiac sympathetic nervous system are involved in the regulation of cardiac function during dynamic exercise.

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