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      Arterial and Cardiac Aging: Major Shareholders in Cardiovascular Disease Enterprises : Part I: Aging Arteries: A “Set Up” for Vascular Disease

      1 , 1
      Circulation
      Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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          Impact of age on the cardiovascular response to dynamic upright exercise in healthy men and women.

          To examine whether age differentially modifies the physiological response to exercise in men and women, we performed gated radionuclide ventriculography with measurement of left ventricular volumes at rest and during peak upright cycle exercise in 200 rigorously screened healthy sedentary volunteers (121 men and 79 women) aged 22-86 yr from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging. At rest in the sitting position, age-associated declines in heart rate (HR) and increases in systolic blood pressure occurred in both sexes. Whereas resting cardiac index (CI) and total systemic vascular resistance (TSVR) in men did not vary with age, in women resting CI decreased 16% and TSVR increased 46% over the six-decade age span. Men, but not women, demonstrated an age-associated increase of approximately 20% in sitting end-diastolic volume index (EDVI), end-systolic volume index (ESVI), and stroke volume index over this age span. Peak cycle work rate declined with age approximately 40% in both sexes, but at any age it was greater in men than in women even after normalization for body weight. At peak effort, ejection fraction (EF), HR, and CI were reduced similarly with age while ESVI and TSVR were increased in both sexes; EDVI increased 35% with age and stroke work index (SWI) rose 19% in men, but neither was related to age in women; and stroke volume index did not vary with age in either sex. When hemodynamics were expressed as the change from rest to peak effort as an index of cardiovascular reserve function, both sexes demonstrated age-associated increases in EDVI and ESVI and reductions in EF, HR, and CI. However, the exercise-induced reduction in ESVI and the increases in EF, CI, and SWI from rest were greater in men than in women. Thus, age and gender each have a significant impact on the cardiac response to exhaustive upright cycle exercise.
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            Cardiovascular regulatory mechanisms in advanced age.

            L Lakatta (1993)

              Author and article information

              Journal
              Circulation
              Circulation
              Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
              0009-7322
              1524-4539
              January 07 2003
              January 07 2003
              : 107
              : 1
              : 139-146
              Affiliations
              [1 ]From the Gerontology Research Center, Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Md; and the Framingham Heart Study, National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Framingham, Mass.
              Article
              10.1161/01.CIR.0000048892.83521.58
              12515756
              6d553bee-5627-4e9a-ae2d-9f8aff97c60f
              © 2003
              History

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