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      Exercise: a risk for sudden death in patients with coronary heart disease.

      Journal of the American College of Cardiology
      Adult, Aged, Coronary Disease, complications, physiopathology, Death, Sudden, etiology, Exercise Test, Exercise Therapy, adverse effects, Heart Arrest, Heart Diseases, rehabilitation, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Physical Exertion, Risk, Ventricular Fibrillation

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          Abstract

          Although sudden arrhythmic death is usually unrelated to exertion, there is more than anecdotal evidence that strenuous exercise in patients with coronary heart disease carries an additional risk for sudden death. When cardiac arrest has been observed after exercise stress testing or within seconds after collapse associated with exertion, ventricular fibrillation has usually been present and has responded to the prompt application of a defibrillatory shock. Exertion-related cardiac arrest is typically a "primary" arrhythmic event not due to acute myocardial infarction. As estimated here, the additional risk of exercise for cardiac arrest may be more than 100-fold during or after a few minutes of vigorous exertion.

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