Publication | Open Access
Effect of Short-Term Maximal Exercise on BNP Plasma Levels inHealthy Individuals
21
Citations
10
References
2010
Year
Many studies documented the relationship between elevated plasma concentrations of natriuretic peptides and cardiovascular diseases, especially heart failure. However, it is still uncertain whether physical exercise leads to a significant release of natriuretic peptide in healthy subjects. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of maximal physical activity on plasma BNP concentrations in healthy individuals within 3 hours after the short-term exercise. BNP plasma concentrations were measured in 15 healthy volunteers before, immediately after as well as 1 hour and 3 hours after bicycle spiroergometry. Maximal workload and exercise capacity were assessed in watts, watt-seconds, metabolic equivalents and VO(2max). Mean BNP plasma levels before, immediately after, 1 hour and 3 hours post-exercise were 19.4+/-2.5; 30.6+/-4.7; 17.9+/-2.5 and 18.7+/-3.1 pg/ml, respectively. The increase of BNP concentrations immediately after exercise was statistically significant (p=0.0017) compared to baseline values. We did not find any correlation between the post-exercise increase of BNP levels and age, body mass index, maximal workload or exercise capacity. In conclusion, short-term maximal physical exercise in healthy individuals led to a fast and transient rise of plasma BNP concentrations, which remained well within normal range and far below the cut-off value for heart failure (100 pg/ml).
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