Exercise Intolerance in Adult Congenital Heart Disease
Lung Institute · St Mary's Hospital · +2 more institutions
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although some patients with adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) report limitations in exercise capacity, we hypothesized that depressed exercise capacity may be more widespread than superficially evident during clinical consultation and could be a means of assessing risk. METHODS AND RESULTS: Cardiopulmonary exercise testing was performed in 335 consecutive ACHD patients (age, 33+/-13 years), 40 non-congenital heart failure patients (age, 58+/-15 years), and 11 young (age, 29+/-5 years) and 12 older (age, 59+/-9 years) healthy subjects. Peak oxygen consumption (peak VO2) was reduced in ACHD patients compared with healthy subjects of similar age (21.7+/-8.5 versus 45.1+/-8.6; P
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.07
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 21
Authors
12- GDGerhard‐Paul DillerCorresponding
Lung Institute, St Mary's Hospital, National Heart Hospital, St. Mary's Hospital
- KDKonstantinos Dimopoulos
Lung Institute, St Mary's Hospital, National Heart Hospital, St. Mary's Hospital
- DODarlington O. Okonko
Lung Institute, St Mary's Hospital, National Heart Hospital, St. Mary's Hospital
- WLWei Li
Lung Institute, St Mary's Hospital, National Heart Hospital, St. Mary's Hospital
- SVSonya V. Babu‐Narayan
Lung Institute, St Mary's Hospital, National Heart Hospital, St. Mary's Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Heart failure
- Internal medicine
- Cardiology
- Heart disease
- Hazard ratio
- Body mass index
- Exercise intolerance
- Good health and well-being