International Journal of Cardiovascular Sciences. 01/set/2021;34(5):515-6.
Exercise-based Cardiovascular Rehabilitation in Chronic Heart Failure: does Exercise Intensity Matter?
It is well recognized that chronic heart failure (CHF) is a multifactorial syndrome that reduces physical exercise tolerance. Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation program is on the frontline of non-pharmacological therapies for CHF patients, counterbalancing the disease-induced issues of physical capacity.
Since a successful exercise rehabilitation program should be efficient and safe, the search for optimal combinations of exercise volume and intensity has sparked interest in the current literature. Although studies have shown feasible combinations of low volume and high intensity, and vice versa, the optimal dose-response of exercise in cardiovascular rehabilitation remains unknown. Classically, aerobic training with moderate intensity (i.e., between 60% and 80% VO2peak or heart rate reserve – HRreserve) is a safe approach to improve physical capacity and provide a cardioprotective effect in CHF disease. As a promising method, short bouts of high-intensity exercise, called high-intensity interval training, seems to be superior than moderate continuous training to reverse left ventricle remodeling and improve aerobic capacity, endothelial function, and quality of life in post-infarction heart failure patients.
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Palavras-chave: Exercise; Heart Diseases; High-Intensity Interval Training; Cardiac Rehabilitation
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