Exercise May Trigger Hidden Heart Changes, New Research Reveals

Exercise May Trigger Hidden Heart Changes, New Research Reveals

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Regular exercise can do more than strengthen your heart. It could also reprogram the nerves that control the heartbeat, new research has found.

The discovery could eventually help doctors better treat common conditions such as irregular heart rhythms, chest pain, angina and stress-related “broken heart” syndrome, according to scientists at the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom.

The study, which looked at lab rats after 10 weeks of aerobic exercise, found that moderate exercise does not affect the heart’s nervous control system uniformly. Instead, it produces distinct and opposite changes on the left and right sides of the body, a division that researchers say has gone unnoticed until now.

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On the right side, the nerve center that sends “go faster” signals to the heart developed many more nerve cells, suggesting greater wiring, the study found.

On the left side, however, the number of nerve cells did not increase as much. Instead, the existing cells grew significantly, indicating a different type of adaptation.

Senior woman checking fitness tracker

Regular exercise can “rewire” the nerves that control the heart, the new study found. (iStock)

“The discovery points to a previously hidden left-right pattern in the body’s ‘autopilot’ system that helps make the heart function,” Dr. Augusto Coppi, senior author of the study and senior lecturer in veterinary anatomy at the University of Bristol, said in a statement.

“This could help explain why some treatments work better on one side than the other and, in the future, help doctors target therapies more precisely and effectively.”

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The findings show that exercise remodels the heart’s nervous control system in a specific way rather than affecting both sides equally, the researchers said.

Understanding that process could help doctors better target treatments, especially for patients who can’t exercise or whose symptoms persist despite lifestyle changes.

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The researchers compared clusters of nerves, known as stellate ganglia, to a “dimmer switch” that adjusts the intensity with which the heart is stimulated. That adjustment is important because overstimulation of these nerves is linked to chest pain and dangerous heart rhythm problems.

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The scientists noted that more studies are needed to determine whether the same effects occur in humans. (iStock)

The findings are at an early stage and are based solely on animal research, so they do not prove the same effects in people.

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The researchers said more studies are needed to determine whether similar changes occur in the left and right nerves in people and whether they could help explain why some heart treatments work better on one side than the other, which could pave the way for more precise and personalized care.

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The study was carried out in collaboration with researchers from University College London, the University of São Paulo and the Federal University of São Paulo in Brazil.

Three adults in exercise class, squatting on exercise balls.

The researchers discovered distinct left-to-right changes in the nerves that control the heart after 10 weeks of aerobic exercise. (iStock)

The research was published in the journal Autonomic Neuroscience.

News Digital has reached out to the study’s authors for comment.

Deirdre Bardolf is a lifestyle writer at News Digital.

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