$Unique_ID{BRK00391} $Pretitle{} $Title{Exercise After Heart Attack} $Subject{heart circulation collateral exercise exercising Circulatory lifestyle lifestyles end arteries secondary branching artery coronary artery disease CAD} $Volume{G-23} $Log{ Exercise Strengthens the Heart*0003202.scf Exercise Improves Circulation*0003207.scf} Copyright (c) 1991-92,1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc. Exercise After Heart Attack ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ QUESTION: After recovering nicely from a heart attack, my physician suggested that a carefully structured exercise program could lead to new arteries growing in my heart that would protect me from future attacks. I am now jogging, though at times it's a struggle, and I keep wondering if this is really working. What do you think? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ANSWER: Your question leads us into some interesting medical history, and a current area of debate. Anatomically speaking, there are two types of arteries; those that end at the tissue they feed, appropriately named "end arteries," and secondary or branching arteries that connect main artery systems, called "collateral arteries". When an end artery becomes blocked, as during a heart attack, the tissue it serves dies, unless blood can flow to the tissue through collateral vessels. An early English physiologist, Richard Lower, described the presence of collateral vessels in the human heart in 1669, and this was accepted doctrine until 1873, when Josef Hyrtl, professor of anatomy at Vienna, failed to find these arteries using a technique that made a cast of all the vessels and corroded away all other tissue. These two opposing views were debated for 80 years until 1960 when W.F. Fulton showed that tiny capillary-like channels did indeed connect different coronary arteries. It is pretty well agreed that reduced blood flow to the tissue of the heart stimulate these capillaries to grow and increase blood flow to the suffering tissue. It would certainly appear to be so in important experiments conducted in animals, and we know that patients that have survived longest with chronic coronary artery disease (CAD) show increased collateral circulation when post mortem examinations are performed. Your physician is correct in that patients with CAD do better when following a prescribed exercise training program. What is missing is the proof that the increased demand for oxygen needed by the heart during exercise can be the stimulus for new growth in the collateral vessels in humans. Investigations that might prove this are difficult to construct and costly to run. Until such data is available it is difficult to answer your question absolutely, but in my opinion from existing research, you are probably doing yourself a world of good. ---------------- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical problem.