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Published Online
on February 7, 2005

Hypertension. 2005
Published online before print February 7, 2005, doi: 10.1161/01.HYP.0000156540.25707.af
A more recent version of this article appeared on March 1, 2005
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Submitted on October 4, 2004
Revised on October 27, 2004

Endurance Exercise Training in Orthostatic Intolerance. A Randomized, Controlled Trial

Robert Winker*; Alfred Barth; Daniela Bidmon; Ivo Ponocny; Michael Weber; Otmar Mayr; David Robertson; André Diedrich; Richard Maier; Alex Pilger; Paul Haber; and Hugo W. Rüdiger

From the Division of Occupational Medicine (R.W., A.B., D.B., I.P., M.W., R.M., A.P., H.W.R.), Medical University of Vienna, Austria; Unit of Sports and Performance Medicine (P.H.), Medical University of Vienna, Austria; the Autonomic Dysfunction Center (D.R., A.D., P.H.), Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn; and the Military Hospital Vienna-Stammersdorf (O.M.), Austria.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: robert.winker{at}meduniwien.ac.at.

Abstract--Orthostatic intolerance is a syndrome characterized by chronic orthostatic symptoms of light-headedness, fatigue, nausea, orthostatic tachycardia, and aggravated norepinephrine levels while standing. The aim of this study was to assess the protective effect of exercise endurance training on orthostatic symptoms and to examine its usefulness in the treatment of orthostatic intolerance. 2768 military recruits were screened for orthostatic intolerance by questionnaire. Tilt-table testing identified 36 cases of orthostatic intolerance out of the 2768 soldiers. Subsequently, 31 of these subjects with orthostatic intolerance entered a randomized, controlled trial. The patients were allocated randomly to either a "training" (3 months jogging) or a "control" group. The influence of exercise training on orthostatic intolerance was assessed by determination of questionnaire scores and tilt-table testing before and after intervention. After training, only 6 individuals of 16 still had orthostatic intolerance compared with 10 of 11 in the control group. The Fisher exact test showed a highly significant difference in diagnosis between the 2 groups (P=0.008) at the end of the study. Analysis of the questionnaire-score showed significant interaction between time and group (P=0.001). The trained subjects showed an improvement in the average symptom score from 1.79±0.4 to 1.04±0.4, whereas the control subjects showed no significant change in average symptom score (2.09±0.6 and 2.14±0.5, respectively). Our data demonstrate that endurance exercise training leads to an improvement of symptoms in the majority of patients with orthostatic intolerance. Therefore, we suggest that endurance training should be considered in the treatment of orthostatic intolerance patients.


Key words: autonomic nervous system • catecholamines • exercise training




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