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physiology and diseases [ 10 ]. Pre-clinical trial of cardiovascular pharmacology can
possibly be investigated using these small rodents efficiently and with relatively low
financial cost.
The most advantageous aspect of utilizing small rodents, such as mice, is the
allowance of several in vivo cardiac parameters to be measured by applying techno-
logical advances such as in making genetic models [ 31 , 43 , 58 ]. Cardiovascular
adaptation accompanied exercise training in experimental animal rodent models are
dependent on various applied factors such as duration, intensity, time, and frequency
[ 20 ]. With a motorized treadmill (with speed at 5, 10, 15, and 20 meters per minute
on a 10% grade for about 3 minutes at each workload), rats and mice can increase
their heart rates by ~40–50% and ~30–40%, respectively [ 59 ].
To study the positive effect or effect of exercise training on hearts, investigators
used different sample types like in vivo hearts [ 60 ], isolated hearts [ 61 ], cardiac
muscle [ 44 ], and isolated cardiomyocytes [ 62 ]. These studies have also focused on
cardiac functional changes induced by exhaustive exercise though echocardiogra-
phy [ 60 ] with changes in left ventricular hemodynamic recorded after an acute bout
of exhaustive exercise using pressure-volume analysis [ 30 ].
A number of rodent models in exercise-induced cardiac hypertrophy have been
made, and a number of endurance exercise trainings effectively induced animal car-
diac hypertrophy, such as treadmill running, voluntary wheel running, and swim
training [ 1 , 21 , 51 , 52 ]. When it comes to inducing physiological hypertrophy, swim
training seems to be as effective as treadmill or voluntary wheel running programs
[ 1 , 51 , 52 ]. Rat swimming model was used to study functional aspects of exercise-
induced hypertrophy in athlete’s heart [ 40 ]. Authors had demonstrated the potential
of assessing left ventricular function in exercise-induced cardiac hypertrophy. Data
showed reversible physiological cardiac hypertrophy induced by exercise in rats and
characterized cardiac systolic (improved contractility) and diastolic (improved
active relaxation and unchanged left ventricular stiffness) functional improvement
[ 40 ]. Although regular swim training was not associated with increased stress
response in chosen rat model, the results from the previous research is limited to
young male rats [ 40 ]. Rats were also chosen to develop animal model of swimming-
trained cardiac hypertrophy to study arrhythmias during an acute period of ischemia
[ 54 ]. In contrast, swim training of rats either reduced [ 54 ] or did not affect [ 49 ] the
susceptibility to ventricular fibrillation brought about by coronary artery occlusion.
Another study noted that endurance training protocols showed improvements as a
result of ventricular remodeling, enhanced contraction, and improved Ca2+ handling
in rats with experiment heart failure [ 63 ].
In mice, aerobic exercise may offer beneficial effects for coronary perfusion in
the myocardial ischemia area via calcitonin gene-related peptide changes [ 34 ].
Mouse cardio-metabolic phenotype models were generated to assess functional
cardiovascular fitness via graded maximal exercise testing [ 43 ]. Investigators also
developed a graded mouse maximal exercise test to improve testing sensitivity and
develop translatable parameters to assess functions of cardiovascular fitness in
healthy and dysfunctional mice with non-invasive and cost- effective methods [ 43 ].
microRNAs were previously found to be necessary players for cardiac growth
4 Acute and Chronic Exercise in Animal Models