The Effect of Lower Body Positive Pressure on Left Ventricular Ejection Duration in Patients With Heart Failure

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Abstract

Lower body positive pressure (LBPP) treadmill activity might benefit patients with heart failure (HF). To determine the short-term effects of LBPP on left ventricular (LV) function in HF patients, LV ejection duration (ED), a measure of systolic function was prospectively assessed in 30 men with stable HF with LV ejection fraction ≤ 40% and 50 healthy men (N). Baseline measurements (100% body weight), including blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR) and LVED, obtained via radial artery applanation tonometry, were recorded after 2 minutes of standing on weight support treadmill and after LBPP achieving reductions of 25%, 50%, and 75% of body weight in random sequence. Baseline, HR, and LVED (251 ± 5 vs 264 ± 4 ms; P =.035) were lower in the HF group. The LBPP lowered HR more (14% vs 6%, P =.009) and increased LVED more (15% ± 7% vs 10% ± 6%; P =.004) in N versus HF. Neither group had changes (Δ) in BP. On generalized linear regression, the 2 groups showed different responses (P

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Avadhani, S., Ihsan, M., Nunez, A., Kamran, H., Singh, S., Hasan, Z., … Lazar, J. (2018). The Effect of Lower Body Positive Pressure on Left Ventricular Ejection Duration in Patients With Heart Failure. Dose-Response, 16(4). https://doi.org/10.1177/1559325818811543

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