Cardiac Rehabilitation with Targeted Intensity Improves Cardiopulmonary Functions Accompanying with Reduced Copeptin Level in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease

AbstractCardiac rehabilitation (CR) plays an important role in cardiovascular disease prevention. Understanding the key component of CR such as training intensity and biomarkers reflecting cardiopulmonary functions may help to better target the rehabilitation program. Thirty-four consecutive patients with coronary artery disease after percutaneous coronary intervention participated in the CR program. The difference between intervention group and control group was mainly the training intensity. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) and blood biomarker measurements were performed before and after CR. The results demonstrated that it was safe and feasible to perform CR, while sufficient training intensity was required to significantly ameliorate CPET parameters. Among numerous biomarkers tested, vasopressin surrogate marker copeptin (CPP) improved significantly after CR. Moreover, improved CPP was correlated with exercise intensity and peak oxygen uptake, two most important indicators of cardiopulmonary exercise capacities. Therefore, CR may have a novel role in maintaining plasma osmolality and cardiovascular homeostasis.Graphical AbstractCardiac rehabilitation training improves cardiopulmonary exercise parameters El and PVO2 which are correlated with reduced CPP level. CPP, copeptin; El, exercise intensity; POV2, peak oxygen uptake.
Source: Journal of Cardiovascular Translational Research - Category: Cardiology Source Type: research