Muscular training induces structural and functional adaptations within the cardiovascular
system which vary according to type, intensity and duration of muscular exertion.
Dynamic muscular training for more than 5 h a week involving more than 1/6th of the
skeletal muscle mass causes an increase in parasym-pathetic tone and an eccentric
myocardial hypertrophy. The dimensions of all cardiac chambers enlarge up to 20 %
and the cardiac muscle mass may increase by 70 % - 80 %. Static muscular training
does not induce any change in the parasympathetic heart regulation, nor does it lead
to any disproportional increase in cardiac muscle mass relative to skeletal muscle
mass. However, a tendency towards a concentric myocardial hypertrophy can be observed.
The effects of regular muscular training on the arteries are the subject of current
scientific investigation. To explain the acute and chronic adaptations of the arterial
vasculatune to exercise, a "shear stress" hypothesis has been proposed. During dynamic
muscular exercise the regional arterial blood flow is enhanced. This leads to an acute
increase in intraluminal shear forces, which stimulates the vascular endothelium with
a reactive flow-dependent regional vasodilation mediated by endothelial-derived relaxing
factors (EDRF, EDNO). Chronic enhancement of shear forces induces endothelial cell-mediated
alterations in gene expression (endothelin, growth factors, regulators of fibrinolysis)
and chronic strutural adaptations of the vascular wall (cytoskeletal redistribution,
cell shape change). Recent duplex sonographic studies in humans have revealed a significant
lumen increase of muscular type arteries induced by dynamic, predominantly aerobic
muscular training, but not by static muscular training. These structural adaptations
are confined to those arteries supplying exercising muscle groups, whereas functional
adaptations with an improvement of regional compliance are found in all arteries.
Key words
Physical training - dynamic exercise - static exercise - cardiovascular adaptations