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The spectrum of exercise tolerance in mitochondrial myopathies: a study of 40 patients
Author(s) -
T. Taivassalo
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/awg028
Subject(s) - mitochondrial myopathy , exercise intolerance , oxidative phosphorylation , medicine , myopathy , vo2 max , circulatory system , cardiology , skeletal muscle , oxidative stress , endocrinology , heart rate , chemistry , heart failure , mitochondrial dna , blood pressure , biochemistry , gene
Impaired skeletal muscle oxidative phosphorylation in patients with severe mitochondrial respiratory chain defects results in disabling exercise intolerance that is associated with a markedly blunted capacity of muscle to increase oxygen utilization in relation to circulatory and ventilatory responses that increase oxygen delivery to muscle during exercise. The range of oxidative limitation and the relationship between the severity of oxidative defects and physiological responses to exercise among a broader spectrum of mitochondrial respiratory chain defects has not been defined. We evaluated oxidative capacity and circulatory and ventilatory responses to maximal cycle exercise in 40 patients with biochemically and/or molecularly defined mitochondrial myopathy (MM) associated with varying levels of exercise tolerance, and compared responses with those in healthy sedentary individuals. In the MM patients, mean peak work capacity (0.88 +/- 0.6 W/kg) and oxygen uptake (VO(2), 16 +/- 8 ml/kg/min) were significantly lower (P < 0.01) than in controls (mean work capacity = 2.2 +/- 0.7 W/kg; VO(2) = 32 +/- 7 ml/kg/min), but the patient range was broad (0.17-3.2 W/kg; 6-47 ml/kg/min). Oxidative capacity in patients was limited by the ability of muscle to extract available oxygen from blood [mean peak systemic arteriovenous O(2) difference (a-vO(2)); patients = 7.7 +/- 3.5, range 2.7-17.6 ml/dl, controls = 15.2 +/- 2.1 ml/dl], as indicated by a linear correlation between peak VO(2) and peak systemic a-vO(2) difference (r(2) = 0.69). In the patients, the increase in cardiac output relative to VO(2) (mean DeltaQ/DeltaVO(2) = 15.0 +/- 13.6; range 3.3-73) and ventilation (mean peak VE/VO(2) = 65 +/- 24; range 21-104) were exaggerated compared with controls (mean DeltaQ/DeltaVO(2) = 5.1 +/- 0.7; VE/VO(2) = 41.2 +/- 7.4, P < 0.01). There was a negative exponential relationship between DeltaQ/DeltaVO(2) and peak systemic a-vO(2) difference (r(2) = 0.92) and between peak VE/VO(2) and systemic a-vO(2) difference (r(2) = 0.53). In patients with heteroplasmic mtDNA mutations, we found an inverse relationship between the proportion of skeletal muscle mutant mtDNA and peak extraction of available oxygen during exercise (r(2) = 0.70). We conclude that the degree of exercise intolerance in MM correlates directly with the severity of impaired muscle oxidative phosphorylation as indicated by the peak capacity for muscle oxygen extraction. Exaggerated circulatory and ventilatory responses to exercise are direct consequences of the level of impaired muscle oxidative phosphorylation and increase exponentially in relation to an increasing severity of oxidative impairment. In patients with mtDNA mutations, muscle mutation load governs mitochondrial capacity for oxidative phosphorylation and determines exercise capacity.

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