Exercise for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention and Treatment From Molecular to Clinical, Part 1

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3 Physical Exercise, Can One Overdose?


With all the evidence above, the agreement that physical exercise can be applied to


treat atherosclerosis can be reached. Like regular medicine, physical exercise also


has dosage effect. Different dosage of physical exercise refers to the time and


strength spent on exercise. Regular intense exercise brings cardiac adaptations


which comprises the clinical constellation of findings known as the athlete’s heart


[ 162 – 165 ]. However, increasing studied found that these adaptations may also have


deleterious effects. For example, some reports have claimed that atherosclerotic


plaques are present in the carotid or peripheral arteries of 90% of marathon runners


at the age of 50–75 [ 166 , 167 ].


Regular and moderate-intensity exercise, on the other hand, reduces cardiovas-

cular morbidity and mortality. It could be served as primary and secondary preven-


tion of CVD [ 165 , 168 – 171 ]. Vigorous exercise training will cause sport-specific


hemodynamic alterations, leading to profitable structural and functional adaptations


in athletes [ 172 – 174 ]. Chronic exposure to high levels of exercise training, which is


equivalent to “exercise overdose”, may bring some adverse effects. Long term stress


on the heart will cause cardiac remodeling. The clinical presentation could be atrial


fibrillation and cardiomyopathy [ 175 , 176 ]. “Overdosed” exercise does more harm


than good. To testify this, 40 elite endurance athletes were included in one study. A


decreased right ventricular systolic function and increased cardiac injury biomark-


ers were detected right after completion of an ultra-endurance exercise. Although in


this study short-term recovery appears complete, chronic structural changes and


reduced RV function have been observed in some athletes [ 176 , 177 ].


4 Summary


In summary, regular physical exercise is highly beneficial in reducing the risk of


atherosclerosis development, and the underlying mechanism could be concluded as


followings: (1) reducing of pro-inflammatory cytokines; (2) counteracting oxidative


stress via decreasing ROS production, Hcy level, NADPH oxidase activity and


increasing NO availability; (3) improving endothelial function; (4) decreasing


endothelial adhesiveness by modulating the expression of ICAM-1, VCAM-1,


E-selectin, P-selectin and ET-1; (5) regulating macrophage function and suppress-


ing the foam cell formation; (6) lowering LDL and triglyceride levels. (7) preserv-


ing atherosclerotic plaque stability. Similar to medicine, the beneficial effect of PE


has dosage effect. Overdosing would also bring “toxicity”. Vigorous exercise train-


ing could adversely affect cardiac function and ameliorate all these beneficial


effects. More clinical trials regarding to the proper exercise training are needed to


establish a more mature physical exercising treatment system.


15 Physical Exercise Is a Potential “Medicine” for Atherosclerosis

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