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Exercise intolerance
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Exercise intolerance

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Exercise intolerance
E312 (CardioNetworks ECGpedia).jpg
EKG of a 70-year-old man with exercise intolerance
Specialty Cardiology, pulmonology, vascular medicine/vascular surgery/phlebology, rheumatology, orthopedics, neurosurgery, neurology; exercise physiology, physical therapy/physiotherapy
Symptoms Dyspnea, chest pain, other pains, fatigue
Duration Variable
Causes Various
Risk factors Multiple, including sedentary lifestyle and low baseline physical activity

Exercise intolerance is a condition of inability or decreased ability to perform physical exercise at the normally expected level or duration for people of that age, size, sex, and muscle mass. It also includes experiences of unusually severe post-exercise pain, fatigue, nausea, vomiting or other negative effects. Exercise intolerance is not a disease or syndrome in and of itself, but can result from various disorders.

In most cases, the specific reason that exercise is not tolerated is of considerable significance when trying to isolate the cause down to a specific disease. Dysfunctions involving the pulmonary, cardiovascular or neuromuscular systems have been frequently found to be associated with exercise intolerance, with behavioural causes also playing a part.

Signs and symptoms

Exercise in this context means physical activity, not specifically exercise in a fitness program. For example, a person with exercise intolerance after a heart attack may not be able to sustain the amount of physical activity needed to walk through a grocery store or to cook a meal. In a person who does not tolerate exercise well, physical activity may cause unusual breathlessness (dyspnea), muscle pain (myalgia), tachypnoea (abnormally rapid breathing), inappropriate rapid heart rate or tachycardia (having a faster heart rate than normal), increasing muscle weakness or muscle fatigue; or exercise might result in severe headache, nausea, dizziness, occasional muscle cramps or extreme fatigue, which would make it intolerable.

The three most common reasons people give for being unable to tolerate a normal amount of exercise or physical activity are:

Causes

Neurological disorders

Respiratory disorders

  • Cystic fibrosis: CF can cause skeletal muscle atrophy, however more commonly it can cause exercise intolerance. The exercise intolerance is associated with reduced pulmonary function that is the origin of CF.
  • Bronchiectasis

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS)

  • Post-exertional malaise is one of the main symptoms of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). PEM can be described as "a delayed and significant exacerbation of ME/CFS symptoms that always follows physical activity and often follows cognitive activity".
  • Orthostatic intolerance (OI) occurs in CFS. OI includes exercise intolerance as one of the main symptoms. It also includes fatigue, nausea, headaches, cognitive problems and visual disturbances as other less major symptoms.

Post-concussion syndrome (PCS)

  • Exercise intolerance is present in those with PCS however their intolerance to exercise may reduce over time.
  • Individuals with postconcussion syndrome may also experience a level of exercise intolerance, however there is little known comparatively about exercise intolerance in PCS patients.

Heart conditions

Musculoskeletal disorders

  • Spinal muscular atrophy: symptoms include exercise intolerance, cognitive impairment and fatigue.
  • Rhabdomyolysis: a condition in which muscle degrades, releasing intracellular muscle content into the blood as reflected by elevated blood levels of creatine kinase. Exercise tolerance is significantly compromised.

Low ATP reservoir in muscles (inherited or acquired)

Cytochrome b mutations

Cytochrome b mutations can frequently cause isolated exercise intolerance and myopathy and in some cases multisystem disorders. The mitochondrial respiratory chain complex III catalyses electron transfer to cytochrome c. Complex III is embedded in the inner membrane of the mitochondria and consists of 11 subunits. Cytochrome b is encoded by the mitochondrial DNA which differs from all other subunits which are encoded in the nucleus. Cytochrome b plays a major part in the correct fabrication and function of complex III.

This mutation occurred in an 18-year-old man who had experienced exercise intolerance for most of his adolescence. Symptoms included extreme fatigue, nausea, a decline in physical activity ability and myalgia.

Intracranial hypertension

Individuals with elevated levels of cerebrospinal fluid can experience increased head pain, throbbing, pulsatile tinnitus, nausea and vomiting, faintness and weakness and even loss of consciousness after exercise or exertion.

General physical problems

A person who is not physically fit due to a sedentary lifestyle may find that vigorous exercise is unpleasant.

Diagnosis

Objective tests for exercise intolerance normally involve performing some exercise. Common tests include stair climbing, walking for six minutes, a shuttle-walk test, a cardiac stress test, and the cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET). In the six-minute walk test, the goal is to see how far the person can walk, with approximately 600 meters being a reasonable outcome for an average person without exercise intolerance. The CPET test measures exercise capacity and help determine whether the cause of exercise intolerance is due to heart disease or to other causes. People who experience significant fatigue before reaching the anaerobic threshold usually have a non-cardiac cause for exercise intolerance.

Additionally, testing for exercise-induced asthma may be appropriate.

Treatment

Exercise is key for many people with heart disease or back pain, and a variety of specific exercise techniques are available for both groups.

In individuals with heart failure and normal EF (ejection fraction), including aortic distensibility, blood pressure, LV diastolic compliance and skeletal muscle function, aerobic exercise has the potential to improve exercise tolerance. A variety of pharmacological interventions such as verapamil, enalapril, angiotensin receptor antagonism, and aldosterone antagonism could potentially improve exercise tolerance in these individuals as well.

Research on individuals with Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), has found a number of effective therapies in relation to exercise intolerance. These include:

  1. Oxygen supplementation
    • Reduces carotid body drive and slows respiration at a given level of exercise.
  2. Treatment with bronchodilators
    • Clinically useful improvements in expiratory airflow, allows fuller exhalation in a given period of time, reduces dynamic hyperinflation, and prolongs exercise tolerance.
  3. Heliox (79% helium, 21% oxygen)
    • Heliox has a lower density than air.
    • Breathing heliox lowers expiratory airflow resistance, decreases dynamic hyperinflation, and prolongs exercise tolerance.
  4. High intensity rehabilitative exercise training
    • Increasing the fitness of muscles decreases the amount of lactic acid released at any given level of exercise.
    • Since lactic acid stimulates respiration, after rehabilitative training exercising, ventilation is lower, respiration is slowed, and dynamic hyperinflation is reduced.

A combination of these therapies (Combined therapies), have shown the potential to improve exercise tolerance as well.

Hazards

Certain conditions exist where exercise may be contraindicated or should be performed under the direction of an experienced and licensed medical professional acting within his or her scope of practice. These conditions include:

The above list does not include all potential contraindications or precautions to exercise. Although it has not been shown to promote improved muscle strength, passive range-of-motion exercise is sometimes used to prevent skin breakdown and prevent contractures in patients unable to safely self-power.

See also

External links


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