The incidence of cardiovascular disease in humans is more than three times that of many wild and domestic mammals despite nearly identical heart morphologies and responses to exercise. A survey of mammalian species from 0.002-kg shrews to 43,000-kg whales shows that the human heart is more dog-like than cat-like and that neither body size nor longevity accounts for the relative vulnerability to cardiovascular disease. Rather, a major difference is daily activity patterns, which may underlie the comparatively healthy hearts of wild mammals.
CITATION STYLE
Williams, T. M., Bengtson, P., Steller, D. L., Croll, D. A., & Davis, R. W. (2015, September 1). The healthy heart: Lessons from nature’s elite athletes. Physiology. American Physiological Society. https://doi.org/10.1152/physiol.00017.2015
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