Long-Term Strenuous Exercise Promotes Vascular Injury by Selectively Damaging the Tunica Media
Cira Rubies, Montserrat Batlle, María Sanz‐de la Garza, Ana Paula Dantas, Ignasi Jorba, Guerau Fernández, Gemma Sangüesa, Marc Abulí, Josép Brugada, Marta Sitges, Daniel Navajas, Lluı́s Mont, Eduard Guasch
Abstract
Moderate exercise has well-founded benefits in cardiovascular health. However, increasing, yet controversial, evidence suggests that extremely trained athletes may not be protected from cardiovascular events as much as moderately trained individuals. In our rodent model, intensive but not moderate training promoted aorta and carotid stiffening and elastic lamina ruptures, tunica media thickening of intramyocardial arteries, and an imbalance between vasoconstrictor and relaxation agents. An up-regulation of angiotensin-converter enzyme, miR-212, miR-132, and miR-146b might account for this deleterious remodeling. Most changes remained after a 4-week detraining. In conclusion, our results suggest that intensive training blunts the benefits of moderate exercise.