Regular exercise could help prevent sudden cardiac death

In a new study, researchers found physical exercise as a protector against sudden cardiac death.

The group of researchers are from the departments of Physical Therapy, Medicine and Electronic Engineering of Valencia University and from the innovations group ITACA.

Moderate aerobic physical exercise protects against sudden cardiac death, which in a majority of cases is caused by the deadliest type of arrhythmia: ventricular fibrillation.

In fact, aerobic physical exercise has been suggested as a non-pharmacological treatment against arrhythmias.

However, the exact underlying cardiovascular protection mechanisms are not fully understood.

In the study, this research sought to determine if an aerobic physical exercise protocol in sedentary animals, such as lab rabbits, could exert a beneficial effect on the electrical properties of the heart related to ventricular fibrillation.

Furthermore, they attempted to learn whether cholinergic neurons in the heart play a role in the potential modifications caused by moderate training.

The researchers studied the intrinsic electrophysiological heterogeneity and modifications to electrical stability on an isolated rabbit heart.

They observed that in the isolated and perfused rabbit heart, training via a protocol of physical exercise produced increased ventricular refractoriness, a decrease of ventricular electrophysiological heterogeneity, and an increase of electrical stability.

These properties were modified in a beneficial way by the applied physical exercise protocol.

This clarifies the basic mechanisms through which regular physical exercise exerts a protective effect against sudden cardiac death, as well as providing information on the participation of cholinergic cardiac neurons on such modifications.

The researchers suggest continuing with this line of research in order to clarify the underlying mechanisms of the observed modifications.

The study is published in PLoS One.

Copyright © 2018 Knowridge Science Report. All rights reserved.

Source: PLoS One.