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H. RoSKAMM This International Symposium to be held on the occasion
of the third anniversary of our institution and under the auspices
of the European Society of Cardiology is entitled "Ventricular
Function at Rest and During Exercise". We have chosen the general
term "ventricular function", because we want to include the
different aspects of myocardial function like contrac- tility,
relaxation and compliance and their influence upon the overall
pumping function of the heart. Heart failure at rest is a rather
advanced outcome of a continuous spectrum of function disturbances.
In order to grade these, it is reasonable to differentiate between
pump function of the heart as a whole and muscle function of the
myocardium. Compen- satory factors like hypertrophy or the
Frank-Starling mechanism may maintain the overall pump function of
the ventricle, despite a defect in the underlying myocardial
contractility. The time sequence of the func- tional disturbances
may be as follows (Fig. 1): EXERCISE GBP"-----,--------------,
>- " 5 ~, ~ ~, ~ '~ I o u f--~__;_;IJ"_'_~'"'"* t REST II Fig.
1. Schematic presen- REDUCTION OF CON REDUCTION OF CON PUMP FAILURE
tation of time sequence of TRACTILITY RESERVE TRACTllITY . or REST
progression in deteriortation _ TIME of ventricular function xvn
The lower line represents contractility at rest, the upper one
contrac- tility during maximum exercise; the range between these
two lines can be called contractility reserve.
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