Effects of acute beta-adrenergic receptor blockade on age-associated changes in cardiovascular performance during dynamic exercise.

1994 
The cardiovascular response to beta-adrenergic stimulation is markedly blunted with advancing age, and this blunting may underlie some of the prominent age-associated changes in the hemodynamic profile during dynamic exercise. To examine this hypothesis, we administered the nonselective beta-adrenergic receptor blocker propranolol (0.15 mg/kg IV) to 25 healthy normotensive men ages 28 to 72 years from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA) immediately before maximal upright cycle ergometry with 99mTc gated cardiac blood pool scintigraphy. Their hemodynamic responses to exercise were compared with those of 70 age-matched healthy unmedicated male BLSA control subjects. The maximal cycle work rate achieved was similar in propranolol-treated men (158 +/- 32 W) and control subjects (148 +/- 32 W) and declined similarly with age in both groups. Hemodynamics at seated rest were not age-related in either group; however, propranolol-treated men had lower heart rates (HR), systolic blood pressure (SBP), e...
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