16 4
2 h of reperfusion. In addition, Powers et al. [ 6 ] showed that, compared with
untrained, exercised animals kept a higher systolic blood pressure throughout
regional ischemia and reperfusion protocol after a 10-week endurance exercise train-
ing program.
Apart from these data, several other studies have underpinned that long-term
exercise benefits the heart against all three levels of IRI [ 22 , 67 , 68 , 78 – 81 ].
However, a criticism exists - most studies applied ischemia within 48 h after the last
exercise session [ 6 , 67 , 78 , 80 , 81 ] and acute bouts of exercise have been demon-
strated to protect the heart against IRI for at least 48 h [ 12 ]. Therefore, this choice
of interval between the last exercise bout and ischemia may have jeopardized the
assessment of cardioprotection afforded exclusively by chronic training.
4.2 Short-Term Exercise
After the first evidence in the late 1970s that exercise training for several weeks
provided cardioprotection against coronary occlusion [ 76 ], investigating the cardio-
protective effect of acute exercise was just a matter of time. Discovering if an intrin-
sic cardioprotective response could be rapidly acquired had crucial impact to
understand the underlying mechanism and the exercise “dosage” required for opti-
mum protection [ 8 ].
In this sense, Locke et al. [ 82 ], using the retrograde perfused Langendorff heart
preparation, observed that rats exercising for only three consecutive days also had
improved post-ischemic developed pressure following IRI. However, just a single
bout did not change any measure of post-ischemic cardiac function. Data from
Yamashita et al. [ 12 ] partially concur with the results found by Locke et al. In this
study, untrained rats and those exercised for a single bout of 30 min at 30 m/min
were submitted to regional ischemia and reperfusion. The authors have demon-
strated that the rate–pressure product showed no significant difference among the
groups after 20 min of ischemia or 30 min after reperfusion. However, exercised rats
exhibited a marked decrease relative to control in the size of myocardial infarct.
On the other hand, Taylor et al. [ 8 ] after submitting 1 and 3 days trained rats to
IRI found that cardiac output of both groups was equally superior than untrained
rats. Several differences between the adopted experimental protocols in these stud-
ies, especially regarding the measured outcomes, ischemia/reperfusion protocol or
exercise duration and intensity, could account for the discrepancy seen in the results.
Nonetheless, although some authors advocate the opposite [ 82 ], most studies argue
that a single exercise session would be enough to provide some degree of cardiopro-
tection against IRI [ 8 , 12 ]. It is clearer, however, that at least three consecutive
exercise sessions benefit the heart against IRI, as data in this sense accumulates in
the literature [ 7 , 10 , 11 , 77 , 83 ].
The question that remains to be answered is whether short-term exercise provide
cardioprotection against IRI just as effective as long-term exercise or not. Despite
the lack of interventional settings focused in this specific matter, previous reviews
J.P. Borges and K. da Silva Verdoorn