* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Relation of systemic and local muscle exercise capacity to
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
140 JACC Vol. 27, No. 1 January 1996:140-5 HEART FAILURE Relation of Systemic and Local Muscle Exercise Capacity to Skeletal Muscle Characteristics in Men With Congestive Heart Failure B A R R Y M. M A S S I E , M D , F A C C , * t A M E R I C O S I M O N I N I , MD,* P U N E E T S A H G A L , MD,* L A U R E N W E L L S , PT, M S , t G A R Y A. D U D L E Y , PaD~: San Francisco, California and Athens, Georgia Objectives. The present study was undertaken to further characterize changes in skeletal muscle morphology and histochemistry in congestive heart failure and to determine the relation of these changes to abnormalities of systemic and local muscle exercise capacity. Background. Abnormalities of skeletal muscle appear to play a role in the limitation of exercise capacity in congestive heart failure, but information on the changes in muscle morpholology and biochemistry and their relation to alterations in muscle function is limited. Methods. Eighteen men with predominantly mild to moderate congestive heart failure (mean + SEM New York Heart Association functional class 2.6 _+ 0.2, ejection fraction 24 -+ 2%) and eight age- and gender-matched sedentary control subjects underwent measurements of peak systemic oxygen consumption (Vo2) during cycle ergometry, resistance to fatigue of the quadriceps femoris muscle group and biopsy of the vastus lateralis muscle. Results. Peak Vo2 and resistance to fatigue were lower in the patients with heart failure than in control subjects (15.7 _+ 1.2 vs. 25.1 -+ 1.5 ml/min-kg and 63 -+ 2% vs. 85 -+ 3%, respectively, both p < 0.001). Patients had a lower proportion of slow twitch, type I fibers than did control subjects (36 + 3% vs. 46 -+ 5%, p = 0.048) and a higher proportion of fast twitch, type IIab fibers (18 _+ 3% vs. 7 -+ 2%, p = 0.004). Fiber cross-sectional area was smaller, and single-fiber succinate dehydrogenase activity, a mitochondrial oxidative marker, was lower in patients (both p < 0.034). Like. wise, the ratio of average fast twitch to slow twitch fiber crosssectional area was lower in patients (0.780 + 0.06 vs. 1.05 -+ 0.08, p = 0.019). Peak Voz was strongly related to integrated succinate dehydrogenase activity in patients (r = 0.896, p = 0.001). Peak Vo2, resistance to fatigue and strength also correlated significantly with several measures of fiber size, especially of fast twitch fibers, in patients. None of the skeletal muscle characteristics examined correlated with exercise capacity in control subjects. Conclusions. These results indicate that congestive heart failure is associated with changes in the characteristics of skeletal muscle and local as well as systemic exercise performance. There are fewer slow twitch fibers, smaller fast twitch fibers and lower succinate dehydrogenase activity. The latter finding suggests that mitochondrial content of muscle is reduced in heart failure and that impaired aerobic-oxidative capacity may play a role in the limitation of systemic exercise capacity. (J Am Coil Cardiol 1996;27:140-5) Systemic exercise intolerance and fatigue are common and troublesome symptoms in patients with heart failure, but their severity correlates poorly with indexes of cardiac function (1-3). This discordance appears to be explained in part by reduced blood flow to exercising muscle (4,5), but evidence also suggests an important role for abnormalities of skeletal muscle, including atrophy (6-8), impaired function (9,10) and altered metabolism (11,12). To determine the basis for these changes, investigators (6,13-16) have evaluated morphologic, histologic and biochemical characteristics of skeletal muscle in patients with congestive heart failure; however, these studies have not yielded a consistent pattern of abnormalities. Muscle biopsy findings have also shown variable, if any, relation with measurements of muscle function, muscle metabolism and exercise capacity. These inconsistencies probably reflect the diversity of functional and biochemical assessments and the heterogeneity of the patient and control groups studied. The present study was undertaken to determine whether the muscle morphology and histochemistry of patients with heart failure differs from those of age-matched sedentary control subjects and, if so, whether these changes are associated with corresponding abnormalities of muscle function and exercise capacity. To accomplish this, biopsy specimens from the lateral aspect of the quadriceps femoris were analyzed for From the *Department of Medicine, Clinical Pharmacology Division and Cardiovascular Research Institute of the University of California, San Francisco and ?Cardiology Section and Physical Therapy Service of the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, California; and SDepartment of Exercise Science, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia. This work was supported in part by Grants KOS-HL02446 and POI-HL25847 (Dr. Massie), 5T32-GM0756 (Drs. Simonini and Sahgal) and NAGW3435 (Dr. Dudley) from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland; the Department of Veterans Affai~ Research Service, Washington, D.C. (Dr. Massie); the California Affiliate of the American Heart Association, San Francisco (Dr. Simonini); and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, D.C. (Dr. Dudley). All editorial decisions for this article, including selection of referees, were made by a Guest Editor. This policy applies to all articles with authors from the University of California, San Francisco. Manuscript received April 25, 1995; revised manuscript received July 13, 1995, accepted August 1, 1995. Address for correspondence: Dr. Barry M. Massie, Cardiology Section (111-C), Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 4150 Clement Street, San Francisco, California 94121. © 1996 by the American College of Cardiology 0735-1097/%/$15.(10 (1735-1097(95)00416-5 JACC Vol. 27, No. 1 January 1996:140-5 MASSIE ET AL. SKELETAL MUSCLE IN H E A R T F A I L U R E fiber type composition, cross-sectional area, capillarization and single-fiber succinate dehydrogenase activity, a mitochondrial marker. These measurements were then related to quantitative indexes of quadriceps femoris function and systemic exercise capacity. Methods Patients. Eighteen men with a history of stable, chronic congestive heart failure of >-6 months' duration were recruited from the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in San Francisco. The diagnosis was based on a history of dyspnea on exertion, fatigue or fluid retention, with confirmation of left ventricular dysfunction by a radionuclide ejection fraction of <40% (mean : SEM 24 _+ 2%). Symptoms were classified as New York Heart Association functional class I, II, III and IV in two, seven, seven and two patients, respectively. Ten patients had ischemic cardiomyopathy, and eight were thought to have primary myocardial disease. Patients were excluded if they had had a myocardial infarction within 6 months or if exercise was limited by symptoms other than fatigue or dyspnea. Other criteria for exclusion included alcohol abuse within the previous 12 months; initiation of therapy with an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, long-acting nitrate, diuretic drug, or digitalis within 3 months; the presence of hemodynamically significant valvular disease; angina pectoris; or exercise limitation by pulmonary, peripheral vascular, arthritic or neurologic disease. For comparison, eight age-matched sedentary men were recruited from employees or patients followed up in the Dermatology Clinic at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center. These subjects had no history of heart disease and no cardiac, peripheral vascular or musculoskeletal abnormalities on physical examination. To avoid the comparison of patients with highly fit control subjects, these subjects were excluded if their peak systemic oxygen consumption (Vo2) was >1 SD above the mean for their age. The protocol was approved by the Committee on Human Research at the University of California, San Francisco; written informed consent was obtained from all participants. Physiologic measurements. Systemic exercise capacity. Peak systemic Vo 2 was quantified during cycle ergometry according to our previously published techniques (8,10). Briefly, after resting on the cycle for 5 rain, subjects performed unloaded exercise for 2 rain. Subsequently, the load was increased to 200 kg-m/min for 2 rain, and then by 100 kg-m/min every 2 rain until exhaustion, as defined by the inability to maintain a pedal frequency of >40 rpm. Standard verbal encouragement was used for all subjects. Respiratory gas exchange was monitored by utilizing a metabolic cart (Sensormedics, Inc.), with measurements of Vo 2 and carbon dioxide production (Vco2) at 15-s intervals throughout exercise. Peak systemic Vo2, defined as the highest Vo 2 achieved, was utilized to quantify exercise capacity, and the respiratory exchange ratio (VoJVco2) was utilized as an 141 index of the adequacy of exercise. The respiratory exchange ratio exceeded 1.0 in all patients and control subjects. Knee extensor function. Knee extensor endurance and strength were measured with an isokinetic dynamometer (Cybex 340), as described in detail previously (8,10). Briefly, 15 maximal knee extensions were performed at 90% in rapid succession over a period of -30 s. Verbal encouragement was given in a standardized manner throughout the procedure. Endurance, or the ability to withstand fatigue, was defined as the ratio of the mean peak torque in the last three extensions to the mean peak torque in the first three extensions multiplied times 100. The mean peak torque for the first three extensions was also used as a measure of strength of the quadriceps femoris muscle group. Muscle biopsies. Two biopsy specimens were taken from two different sites, 16 to 19 cm above the patella, by using the percutaneous needle technique of Bergstrom (17). Specimens were processed for histochemical analysis as described in detail elsewhere (18-21). Briefly, sections were assayed for determination of muscle fiber type (I, IIa, Ilab, IIb and IIc) (22), capillarity and succinate dehydrogenase activity, an estimate of mitochondrial content. Area and capillarity of the different fiber types were assessed by using a semiautomated image analysis system and Image software (National Institutes of Health). From these data, fiber type percent, the ratio of fast twitch to slow twitch fiber cross-sectional area, fiber type-specific absolute and relative areas, average fiber area and the number of capillaries surrounding a given fiber were calculated. Regions of a section were excluded from analysis if they contained oblique or histologically abnormal fibers. At least 150 fibers in each section were assessed for area, capillarity and type. Data from the two biopsy sites in each subject were averaged to enhance validity of the results (23). Type IIc fibers were rare, comprising 2 < 2% overall, and were subsequently excluded from analyses. Single-fiber succinate dehydrogenase activity was determined by using a quantitative histochemical technique described by Blanco et al. (24), as done previously (21). Fiber type-specific activity was determined by matching fibers assayed for succinate dehydrogenase with those in serial sections assayed for myofibrillar adenosine triphosphatase activity. About 60 fibers/section were thus assayed. Enzyme activities for type IIab and type IIb fibers were averaged and reported as activity for type IIb fibers, because of the low proportion of type IIab fibers in the control subjects. An adequate number of matched fibers was available for performing this fiber-specific analysis in 11 of 18 patients and 7 of 8 control subjects. These data were used with fiber type percent and average fiber cross-sectional area to calculate average integrated succinate dehydrogenase activity irrespective of fiber type, an overall estimate of mitochondrial content. Statistical analyses. Comparisons between groups were made by using an independent analyses of variance with repeated measures over a given variable or by an independent t test with SuperANOVA software. Percent and ratio data 142 MASSIE ET AL. SKELETAL MUSCLE IN HEART FAILURE JACC Vol. 27, No. l January 1996:140-5 Table 1. Clinical Data and Physiologic Measurements in 26 Men (18 patients with congestive heart failure and 8 control subjects) Age (yr) Patients Control subjects 64 + 2 65 -+ 3 NYHA Class EF (%) 2.6 + 0.2 24 _+2 . . . . . . Peak Vo2 (ml/kg-min) Fatigue Index (%) Strength (Nm) 15.7 _+1.2" 25.1 -+ 1.5 63 + 2* 85 _+3 87 _+8 89 _+7 *p < 0.001,patients versus control subjects.Data are presented as mean value + SEM, EF ejection fraction; Nm Newton-meters; NYHA Class = New York Heart Association functional class; Vo2 = oxygenconsumption;... = data not available. were arc-sine or log transformed before analyses. Correlations between variables were assessed by using Pearson's product correlations. Data are presented as mean value _+ SEM. Results Systemic exercise capacity and local muscle function (Table 1). Control subjects and patients with heart failure were comparable in age. The heart failure group had a mean ejection fraction of 24 _ 2% and functional class of 2.6 _+ 0.2. Although peak Vo2 in the control group was relatively low, consistent with the age and sedentary status of these subjects, it was significantly higher than that in patients with heart failure (25.1 _+ 1.5 vs. 15.7 _ 1.2 ml/kg-min, p < 0.001). The fatigue index of the knee extensors, calculated from the decline in peak torque during the series of 15 knee extensions, was lower in the patients (63 _+ 2% vs. 85 -+ 3%, p < 0.001). In contrast, knee extensor strength was not significantly reduced in the patients (87 _+ 8 vs. 89 _+ 7 Newton-meters). Systemic and local exercise capacity, expressed as peak Vo2 and the fatigue index, respectively, were correlated in both patients (r = 0.57, p = 0.026) and control subjects (r = 0.80, p = 0.018). Muscle biopsy findings (Table 2). The results of the fiber type analyses and morphometry are given in Table 2. Significant intergroup differences were found in fiber type distribu- tion. The percent of type I fibers was less in the patients with heart failure than in the control subjects (36 _+ 3% vs. 46 + 5%, p = 0.048), whereas the percent of type Ilab fibers was greater in the patients (18 + 3% vs. 7 _+ 2%, p = 0.004). In both patients and control subjects, type I and IIa fibers were larger than lib fibers. Overall fiber cross-sectional area was smaller in patients than in control subjects, reflecting the smaller size of the fast twitch fibers, because the area of type I fibers was similar in the two groups. Therefore, the ratio of average fast twitch to slow twitch fiber area was lower in patients than in control subjects (0.78 + 0.06 vs. 1.05 -+ 0.08, p = 0.019). The hierarchy of succinate dehydrogenase activity reflected the usual type I > type IIa > type lib pattern in both groups, but the mean activity per fiber was reduced in the patients (100 z 5 vs. 119 +_ 9 optical density U/min x 10 -4, p = 0.026), reflecting lower values in all fiber types. The number of capillaries around a given fiber followed the hierarchy of type I or type IIa > type llab or type IIb. However, the number of capillaries per fiber did not differ between groups for any type of fiber. Relation of exercise capacity to muscle characteristics. The finding that the patients with heart failure and control subjects differed in both distribution and size of fiber types necessitated that skeletal muscle characteristics be weighted Table 2. Skeletal Muscle Morphology and Histochemical Findings in the 26 Study Subjects Fiber Type I Distribution (%)*t Patients (n = 18) Control subjects (n = 8) Mean cross-sectional area (/,mZ)§t Patients Control subjects Succinic dehydrogenase activity§t (optical density U/min × 10 4) Patients Control subjects Capillaries per fibert Patients Control subjects 36 _+3:~ 46 -+ 5 IIa 25 + 4 28 -+ 5 llab 18 _+3* 7 -+ 2 lib 22 _+4 17 -- 4 6,031 _+615 5,874 _+487 5,598 _+647 7,200 _+ 1,001 4.792 + 644 5,986 _+971 3,413 +_409 5,309 _+867 130 _+7 143 _+13 94 _+8 123 _+12 II II 76 _+8 91 _+14 4.2 + 0.2 4.2 _+0.2 3.7 _+0.2 4.1 + 0.3 3.3 _+0.3 3.4 _+0.4 2.9 + 0.2 3.2 _+0.3 *Fiber type by group interaction by analysis of variance (ANOVA), p = 0.022; tfiber type by ANOVA, p < 0.043; Sp < 0.05, patients versus control subjects;§group effectby ANOVA, patients versus control subjects,p -< 0.034; Ilsuecinic dehydrogenase activity not given for Ilab fibers because of small numbers. Data are presented as mean value z SEM. JACC Vol. 27, No. 1 January 1996:140-5 3O MASSIE ET AL. SKELETAL MUSCLE 1N HEART FAILURE r=O.90 p<0.001 .c_ 25 E 20 • i 0> 1 0 -~ 5 a_ 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 Integrated SDH (od units x um2) 120 Figure 1. Plot shows a strong relation between integrated succinate dehydrogenase(SDH) activityand peak oxygenconsumption(VO2) in the patients with congestiveheart failure (r = 0.90, p < 0.001). od = optical density. for these variables when making comparisons between biopsy findings and exercise capacity. For example, the lower percent of type I fibers in patients was partially offset by the finding that their slow twitch fibers were relatively larger than their fast twitch counterparts as compared with observations in control subjects. In the heart failure group, peak Vo 2 correlated with average fiber area (r = 0.67, p = 0.007), primarily reflecting the close correlation with fast twitch fiber area (r = 0.68, p = 0.006). As shown in Figure 1, the relation between peak Vo2 and integrated succinate dehydrogenase activity was very close (r = 0.90, p < 0.001). Peak Vo2 did not correlate with any measures of fiber size in the control subjects (r values all <0.50, p values all >0.20), nor did it correlate with succinate dehydrogenase activity in this uniformly sedentary older patient group (r = 0.28, p = 0.639). The knee extensor fatigue index correlated significantly with average fast twitch fiber area and the ratio of the fast twitch to slow twitch fiber area in the patients with heart failure (r = 0.57, p = 0.043 and r = 0.56, p = 0.037, respectively). The relation between the fatigue index and succinate dehydrogenase activity was of borderline significance (r = 0.53, p = 0.082). The fatigue index did not correlate with any quantitative muscle biopsy measurement in the control group. Knee extensor strength was correlated to average fiber area (r = 0.54, p = 0.046) and the average fast twitch fiber area (r = 0.57, p = 0.043) in patients but to none of these variables in the control group. Discussion Major findings of the present study. Several findings in this study provide additional insight into the pathophysiology of skeletal muscle dysfunction and exercise intolerance in patients with heart failure. First, they build on previous reports that have demonstrated a decreased proportion of slow twitch oxidative fibers and reduced aerobic-oxidative enzyme content in such patients (6,13-16). In addition to these findings, our results show that the lower mitochondrial content is not specific to fiber type but is evident for each of the major fiber 143 types of human skeletal muscle, as reflected by single-fiber succinate dehydrogenase activity. Second, the strong relation between average integrated succinate dehydrogenase activity, a cumulative index of mitochondrial aerobic-oxidative enzyme content, and peak Vo2 in patients with heart failure, but not in control subjects, suggests that the impairment of aerobicoxidative capacity may be physiologically significant and contribute to exercise limitation. Finally, several of our findings in patients with heart failure differ from the characteristic responses to muscle disuse in healthy sedentary individuals (20,25-28). Skeletal muscle characteristics in heart failure. Several groups have reported a lower aerobic-oxidative enzyme content in homogenates of skeletal muscle from patients with heart failure, irrespective of the indexes measured (6,13-16). In contrast, this study quantified succinate dehydrogenase activity in single-muscle fibers in relation to their contractile material. This technique affords the opportunity to determine mitochondrial content in the three major fiber types of human skeletal muscle and eliminates the potential for extraneous factors, such as extracellular fluid accumulation or fatty infiltration, to affect measures of enzyme activity. As is the case in normal subjects (21,29), aerobic-oxidative enzyme activity in the patients with heart failure showed a hierarchy among fiber types, with type I > type IIa > type lib, However, irrespective of fiber type, the succinate dehydrogenase activity of patients was lower than that in control subjects. Thus, the reduction in oxidative enzyme activity was not specific to one group of fibers. The results of this study also extend previous observations concerning differences in fiber type composition between patients with heart failure and control subjects. The previously reported finding (14,15) that such patients have a lower proportion of type I, slow twitch fibers and more type 2b, fast twitch glycolytic fibers than do normal subjects was also evident in this study. In addition, we subclassified fast twitch fibers into three types, because it is now evident that fibers that stain intermediate between types IIa and lib, and are thus distinct from their counterparts (22). Our results suggest that the higher proportion of type lib fibers reported previously in patients with heart failure may have been due to a higher proportion of type IIab fibers. These findings suggest transition to skeletal muscle with a lower aerobic-oxidative enzyme content because type IIab or type IIb fibers have lower succinate dehydrogenase activity than do type I or type IIa fibers (21). The mechanisms responsible for the different fiber type composition of skeletal muscle between patients and age-matched sedentary control subjects is not known, but preferential loss of type I fibers through denervation or transformation from slow to fast fibers, as may occur with muscle disuse, may be responsible (30,31). The majority of previous studies (6,13-16) have reported at least a trend toward smaller type II fibers in patients with heart failure than in control subjects. We found that, irrespective of fiber type, fibers were significantly smaller in patients than in control subjects; in addition, the lower ratio for the cross- 144 MASSIE ET AL. SKELETAL MUSCLE IN HEART FAILURE sectional area of fast to slow fibers in patients indicates that atrophy is relatively specific to fast fibers. Findings concerning skeletal muscle capillarization in patients with heart failure have been variable (13-15). We found no difference between groups in the number of capillaries surrounding a given fiber type, but the maintenance of a normal capillary density is of interest because a reduction in proportion to the decrease in mitochondrial content is more typical in normal subjects. Functional and metabolic correlates of the muscle biopsy findings. Data relating histologic characteristics of skeletal muscle to exercise capacity are limited and conflicting. Mancini et al. (13) reported that peak Vo2 and type I fiber percent were positively correlated, whereas peak Vo 2 and type lib fiber percent were inversely related. Lipkin et al. (6) did not find any significant correlations between knee extensor strength and several skeletal muscle characteristics despite abnormalities in both. We found that peak Vo 2 correlated with average fast twitch fiber and overall fiber cross-sectional area in patients with heart failure, as did the fatigue index and strength of the knee extensors. No such correlations were found in the control subjects. Whether these findings have mechanistic significance or represent associations with other factors remains uncertain. Data relating exercise performance or metabolism to the content of oxidative enzymes also have shown mixed results. We found a strong correlation between peak Vo 2 and integrated succinate dehydrogenase activity in patients with heart failure (r = 0.90, p < 0.001), but not in control subjects. Although Mancini et al. (13) did not observe a relation between these variables, or between aerobic-oxidative enzyme content and phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy indexes of metabolism, in rats with experimental heart failure, citrate synthase activity and phosphocreatine content during repetitive stimulation of the gastrocnemius muscle were significantly correlated (32). Drexler et al. (15) and Munzel et al. (33) have reported a significant relation between skeletal muscle mitochondrial content and leg oxygen extraction, and parallel increases in these measures during chronic angiotensinconverting enzyme inhibitor therapy. Thus, our data, in conjunction with previous findings demonstrating that in some patients blood flow to exercising muscle does not limit oxygen uptake, are consistent with the hypothesis that the low mitochondrial content of skeletal muscle in heart failure influences exercise capacity (34,35). This is especially noteworthy for systemic exercise performance, which in healthy subjects is determined primarily by cardiac reserve (36). However, other factors are also likely to be involved in local muscular exercise intolerance in the patients. We found a 40% decrease in force during 30 s of repetitive knee extensions in this and a previous study (10). Patients with heart failure have also shown (37,38) a similar decline in force during isometric ankle flexion or knee extension. Fatigue was rapid and severe whether intermittent blood flow was allowed during knee extensions or blood flow was occluded (10), suggesting that during these local muscle protocols, nonmetabolic factors may also play a role. Such factors JACC Vol. 27, No. 1 January 1996:140-5 may include failure of excitation-contraction coupling (39), inefficiency of chemical to mechanical energy transduction (40) or reflex inhibition of motor unit activation, alone or in combination. Exercise intolerance in congestive heart failure and muscle disuse. Since skeletal muscle abnormalities have been recognized in heart failure, a major issue has been whether they occur solely as a secondary consequence of the diminished activity accompanying this condition or whether they are a direct consequence of the syndrome and an additional factor in propagating exercise intolerance (41). Several findings in this study provide circumstantial evidence that a process in addition to muscle disuse is being expressed. First, reduced strength and muscle atrophy are the characteristic responses to inactivity (28), with disuse consistently evoking greater relative decreases in strength than in muscle size (20,25,27,28). In contrast, patients with mild to moderate heart failure exhibit significant atrophy but relatively well preserved strength (8,10, present study). Second, as discussed previously, patients experience rapid and extreme local muscular fatigue (10, present study). In normal subjects, forced inactivity that reduces mitochondrial content by 15% to 20%, the difference noted between patients and control subjects in this study, evokes only a slight decline ( - 6 % ) in the ability to withstand fatigue (27). Third, patients with heart failure showed a markedly lower ratio of fast twitch to slow twitch fiber size than did control subjects in this study, suggesting atrophy mainly of fast twitch fibers, as other investigators (6,13-16) have noted. In contrast, this ratio is not altered by muscle disuse in healthy subjects, who exhibit comparable atrophy of all fiber types (20,25,26). Although no definitive conclusions can be drawn from these observations, these findings suggest that as yet undefined factors are responsible for some of the changes in muscle function and protein expression in heart failure. Implications of this study. The results of this study provide additional insight into previous demonstrations of abnormal skeletal muscle function, metabolism and composition in patients with congestive heart failure. They support the concept that reduced aerobic-oxidative capacity and possibly other factors contributing to extreme local muscular fatigue play a role in their exercise intolerance. Although it is not possible to conclude from the present results that these changes are specific for the syndrome of heart failure or to define the role of muscle disuse in their genesis, at least some of the abnormalities appear not to be characteristic of inactivity alone. Additional studies are required to differentiate the contributions of heart failure from those of chronic illness and inactivity in the pathophysiology of skeletal muscle dysfunction in this syndrome. We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Susan Ammon, RN and Kimberly Prouty, RN in performing the tests, and the technical and statistical assistance of Bruce M. Hather, PhD, Robert T. Harris, PhD, Michael S. Conley, MS and Sue Loffek. We especially thank the patients and control subjects who volunteered for this study. JACC Vol. 27, No. 1 January 1996:140-5 MASSIE ET AL. SKELETAL MUSCLE IN HEART FAILURE References 1. Franciosa JA, Park M, Levine TB. Lack of correlation between exercise capacity and indexes of resting left ventricular performance in heart failure. Am J Cardiol 1981;47:33-9. 2. Szlachcic J, Massie BM, Kramer B, Topic N, Tubau J. Correlates and prognostic implication of exercise capacity in chronic congestive heart failure. Am J Cardiol 1985;55:1037-42. 3. Higginbotham MB, Morris KG, Conn EH, Coleman RE, Cobb FR. Determinants of variable exercise performance among patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction. Am J Cardiol 1983;51:52-60. 4. Zelis R, Nellis SH, Longhurst J, Lee G, Mason DT. Abnormalities in the regional circulations accompanying congestive heart failure. Prog Cardiovasc Dis 1975;72:494-510. 5. Wilson JR, Martin JL, Schwartz D, Ferraro N. Exercise intolerance in patients with chronic heart failure: role of impaired nutritive flow to skeletal muscle. Circulation 1984;69:1079-87. 6. Lipkin DP, Jones DA, Round JM, Poole-Wilson PA. Abnormalities of skeletal muscle in patients with chronic heart failure, lnt J Cardiol 1988;18: 187-95. 7. Mancini DM, Walter G, Reichek N, et al. Contribution of skeletal muscle atrophy to exercise intolerance and altered muscle metabolism in heart failure. Circulation 1992;85:1364-73. 8. Minotti JR, Pillay P, Oka R, Wells L, Christoph I, Massie BM. Skeletal muscle size: relationship to muscle function in heart failure. J Appl Physiol 1993;373-81. 9. Buller NP, Jones D, Poole-Wilson PA. Direct measurement of skeletal muscle fatigue in patients with chronic heart failure. Br Heart J 1991;65: 20-4. 10. Minotti JR, Christoph I, Oka R, Weiner MW, Wells L, Massie BM. Impaired skeletal muscle function in patients with congestive heart failure: relationship to systemic exercise performance. J Clin Invest 1991;88:2077-82. 11. Wilson JR, Fink L, Maris J, et al. Evaluation of energy metabolism in skeletal muscle of patients with heart failure with gated phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance. Circulation 1985;71:57-62. 12. Massie BM, Conway M, Yonge R, et al. Skeletal muscle metabolism in patients with congestive heart failure. Relation to clinical severity and blood flow. Circulation 1987;76:1009-19. 13. Mancini DM, Coyle E, Coggan A, et al. Contribution of intrinsic skeletal muscle changes to 31P skeletal muscle metabolic abnormalities in patients with chronic heart failure. Circulation 1989;80:1338-46. 14. Sullivan MJ, Green H J, Cobb FR. Skeletal muscle biochemistry and histology in ambulatory patients with long-term heart failure. Circulation 1990;81:518-27. 15. Drexler H, Riede U, Munzel T, Konig H, Funke E, Just H. Alterations of skeletal muscle in chronic heart failure. Circulation 1992;85:1751-9. 16. Ralston MA, Merola AJ, Leier CV. Depressed aerobic enzyme activity of skeletal muscle in severe chronic heart failure. J Lab Clin Med 1991;117: 370-2. 17. Bergstrom J. Muscle electrolytes in man. Scand J Clin Lab Invest 1962; 14Suppl 68:1-110. 18. Hather BM, Mason CE, Dudley GA. Histochemical demonstration of muscle fiber types and capillaries on the same transverse section. Clin Physiol 1991;11:127-31. 19. Hather BM, Tesch PA, Buchanan P, Dudley GA. Influence of eccentric actions on skeletal muscle adaptations to resistance training. Acta Physiol Scand 1991;143:1177-85. 20. Hather BM, Adams GR, Tesch PA, Dudley GA. Skeletal muscle responses to lower limb suspension in humans. J Appl Physiol 1992;72:1943-8. 145 21. Ploutz LL, Tesch PA, Biro RL, Dudley GAL.Effect of resistance training on muscle use during exercise. J Appl Physiol 1994;76:1675-81. 22. Staron RS. Correlation between myofibrillar ATPase activity and myosin heavy chain composition in single human muscle fibers. Histochemistry 1991;96:21-2. 23. Elder GCB, Bradbury K, Roberts R. Variabilib' of fibre type distributions within human muscles. J Appl Physiol 1982;53:1473-80. 24. Blanco CE, Sieck GC, Edgerton VR. Quantitative histochemical determination of succinic dehydrogenase activity in skeletal muscle fibers. Histochem J 1988;20:230-43. 25. Hikida RS, Gollnick PD, Dudley GA, Convertino VA, Buchanan P. Structural and metabolic characteristics of human skeletal muscle following 30 days of stimulated microgravity. Aviat Space Environ Med 1989;60:664-70. 26. Lindboe ChF, Platou ChS. Disuse atrophy of human skeletal muscle: an en~me histochemical study. Acta Neuropathol 1982;56:241-4. 27. Berg HE, Dudley GA, Hather B, Tesch PA. Work capacity and morphologic characteristics of the human quadriceps muscle in response to unloading. Clin Physiol 1993;13:337-47. 28. Ploutz-Snyder LL, Tesch PA, Dudley GA. Effect of unweighting on skeletal muscle use during exercise. J Appl Physiol. In press. 29. Essen B, Jansson E, Henriksson J, Taylor AW, Saltin B. Metabolic characteristics of fibre types in human skeletal muscle. Acta Physiol Scand 1975;95:153-65. 30. Pette P, Vrbova G. Invited review: neural control of phenotypic expression in mammalian muscle fibers. Muscle Nerve 1985;8:676-89. 31. Roy RR, Baldwin KM, Edgerton VR. The plasticity of skeletal muscle: effects of neuromuscular activity. Exerc Sport Sci Rev 1991;19:269-312. 32. Arnolda L, Brosnan J, Rajagopalan B, Radda GK. Skeletal muscle metabolism in heart failure in rats. Am J Physiol 1991;261:H434-42. 33. Munzel T, Kurz S, Drexler H. Alterations of skeletal muscle ultrastructure in patients with heart failure reversible under treatment with ACE-inhibitors? Herz 1993;18Suppl 1:400-5. 34. Wilson JR, Mancini D, Dunkman B. Exertional fatigue due to intrinsic skeletal muscle dysfunction in patients with heart failure. Circulation 1993; 87:470-5. 35. Jondeau G, Katz SD, Zohman L, et al. Active skeletal muscle mass and cardiopulmonary reserve. Failure to attain peak aerobic capacity during maximal bicycle exercise in patients with severe congestive heart failure. Circulation 1992;86:1351-6. 36. Mitchell JG, Blomqvist G. Maximal oxygen uptake. N Engl J Med 1981;284: 1018-22. 37. Minotti JR, Pillay P, Chang L, Wells L, Massie BM. Neurophysiological assessment of skeletal muscle fatigue in patients with congestive heart failure. Circulation 1992;86:903-8. 38. Yamani MH, Sahgal P, Wells L, Massie BM. Exercise intolerance in chronic heart failure is not associated with impaired recovery of muscle function or submaximal exercise performance. J Am Coil Cardiol 1995;25:1232-8. 39. Perreault CL, Gonzalez-Serratos H, Litwin SE, Sun X, Franzini-Armstrong C, Morgan JP. Alterations in contractility and intracellular Ca2+ transients in isolated bundles of skeletal muscle fibers from rats with chronic heart failure. Circ Res 1993;73:405-12. 40. Massie BM, Conway M, Rajagopalan B, et al. Skeletal muscle metabolism during exercise under ischemic conditions: evidence for abnormalities unrelated to blood flow. Circulation 1988;78:320-6. 41. Minotti JR, Christoph I, Massie BM. Skeletal muscle function, morphology, and metabolism in patients with congestive heart failure. Chest 1992;101 Suppl:333s-9s.