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Rapid,
erratic heartbeats: Exercise-linked
Ventricular Tachycardia is not a risk to
healthy Older Adults
Newswise — Healthy, older adults free of
heart disease need not fear that bouts of
rapid, irregular heartbeats brought on by
vigorous exercise might increase short- or
long-term risk of dying or having a heart
attack, according to a report by heart
experts at Johns Hopkins and the U.S.
National Institute on Aging (NIA).
Researchers say such fears surfaced after
previous studies found that episodes of
errant heart rhythms, more formally known as
non-sustained ventricular tachycardia, more
than double the chance of sudden death in
people who have already suffered a heart
attack.
In a study to be presented Nov. 16 at the
American Heart Association’s (AHA) annual
Scientific Sessions in Orlando, the research
team monitored for on average 12 years the
medical records of 2,234 initially healthy
men and women, ages 21 to 96, and
participating in the NIA’s Baltimore
Longitudinal Study of Aging. In adults with
no earlier signs of heart disease,
researchers found no adverse effects
resulting from brief episodes of
exercise-induced ventricular tachycardia.
In the study, each volunteer participant had
a least one exercise stress test performed
before 2001. The test assesses the heart’s
pumping ability, requiring participants,
whose average age at testing was 52, to walk
or jog on a treadmill at increasing speeds
and inclines until they felt exhausted,
about 10 minutes for most.
Eighty-one (roughly 4 percent, 65 men and 16
women, mostly older participants)
experienced short periods of rapid,
irregular heartbeats during exercise,
typically lasting from three to six
heartbeats, and at a rate hovering around
175 beats per minute.
Researchers say overall death rates were
higher in the tachycardia group than in the
nontachycardia group (at 29 percent and 16
percent, respectively).
But when they
adjusted their analysis to account for
differences in age, gender, and those who
developed known risk factors for heart
disease early on, they found no measureable
increased risk of overall death, death from
heart disease, or suffering a heart attack
between the tachycardia and nontachycardia
groups.
Lead study investigator and cardiologist
Joseph Marine, M.D., says the study results
should “provide reassurance” among
apparently healthy middle-age and older
people that such short episodes of
ventricular tachycardia provoked on exercise
testing do not have long-term consequences
to health.
“So long as a medical examination shows no
underlying heart disease or other serious
health condition, then people should
continue to live a normal lifestyle,
including a return to exercise after
clearance from their physician,” says
Marine, an associate professor at the Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine and
its Heart and Vascular Institute.
“Our results suggest that brief,
non-sustained ventricular arrhythmia during
exercise testing should, generally, not
cause undue alarm in patients or
physicians.”
When suspicious about heart disease, Marine
says, care providers should investigate
further for any signs of ischemia, arterial
blockages, heart muscle disease or inherited
risk of arrhythmia.
But if everything checks
out negative for heart disease, then
restrictions on exercise are not needed.
Indeed, he says, regular exercise has long
been known to cut down on the risk of
developing heart disease.
Study co-investigator and Hopkins
cardiologist Gary Gerstenblith, M.D., adds
that the latest study results should help
physicians better triage which patients to
treat after incidents of exercise-induced
tachycardia.
“Most people who experience erratic heart
rhythms during exercise and who have no
underlying heart condition can be left
alone, they do not need to be treated, and
they can continue to exercise,” says
Gerstenblith, a professor at Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine.
“However, patients with erratic heartbeats
who are later found to have underlying
coronary heart disease should refrain from
arduous exercise until consulting with their
physician about treatment with drugs and/or
an implantable device to improve their heart
function and to decrease the risk of dying
from a potentially fatal heart rhythm.”
Marine says the next steps in their research
are to determine whether other arrhythmias
brought on by exercise, such as atrial
tachycardia, have any impact on future death
or heart-attack rates or lead to other
arrhythmias.
Funding support for the study was provided
by the NIA, a member of the National
Institutes of Health.
In addition to Marine and Gerstenblith,
Johns Hopkins’ Grant Chow, M.D., was
involved in this study. Other researchers
involved were Veena Shetty, M.S., at the
Medstar Research Institute; Jeanette Wright
and Samer Najjar, M.D., both at the NIA.
The
senior investigator on the research was
Jerome Fleg, M.D., at the National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute, another member of
the National Institutes of Health.
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