Objective: Inducing tolerance to myocardial ischemia by repeated brief episodes of ischemia has been called "ischemic preconditioning." "Warm-up" phenomenon refers to patients with coronary heart disease improving performance after a first exertion and may represent a clinical counterpart to ischemic preconditioning. The goal of this study was to assess whether the severity of myocardial ischemia would be attenuated by two repeated walking-induced ischemic episodes in adult and older patients.
Subjects: Thirty-eight adults (51 +/- 5 years) and 39 older patients (76 +/- 4 years) with stable angina and angiographic evidence of coronary stenosis.
Measurements: Holter monitoring was performed in adult and older patients walking on two consecutive occasions, with a 5-minute rest between walks, a distance known to have previously caused myocardial ischemia.
Results: Computer-assisted analysis recorded by ambulatory Holter monitoring revealed that the mean maximal ST-segment depression (P < .001) and ischemia duration decreased (P < .001), whereas the ischemic threshold increased (P < .001), from the first to the second walk in the adult but not in the older group.
Conclusions: Myocardial ischemia is attenuated and ischemic threshold is increased between two brief ischemic episodes in adult but not in older patients. These results indicate that the "warm-up" phenomenon, involved in increasing myocardial ischemic tolerance, is absent in the aging heart.