This scoping review examines the relationship between various forms of physical activity and ventricular-arterial coupling in male adults. The population includes healthy adults, athletes, older individuals, and those with cardiovascular risk. The review covers interventions such as acute stress testing, structured training, and lifelong physical activity. No formal risk-of-bias assessment was performed, and methodological gaps were identified.
The analysis indicates that VAC is preserved or optimized in physically active and endurance-trained individuals. Furthermore, VAC with aerobic exercise leads to improved ventricular efficiency and reduced arterial load. During acute haemodynamic stress, VAC remains relatively stable. The review did not report adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, or tolerability.
The authors emphasize that substantial heterogeneity exists in study designs, exercise contexts, and VAC measurement techniques. Consequently, causal inferences remain limited. The review does not provide specific effect sizes or absolute numbers for the outcomes. Practice relevance was not reported in the source material.
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BackgroundVentricular–arterial coupling (VAC) integrates cardiac and vascular function and has emerged as a relevant marker of cardiovascular efficiency and adaptability. Exercise and physical activity are believed to influence VAC through multiple physiological pathways, yet the scope, methods, and consistency of available evidence remain unclear.ObjectiveTo map and characterize the existing evidence on the relationship between exercise, physical activity, and VAC across male adult populations, assessment methods, and study designs.MethodsA scoping review was conducted in accordance with JBI methodology and reported following PRISMA-ScR guidelines. Studies published between 1990 and 2025 were identified through PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Library. Eligible studies examined VAC in male adults in relation to exercise or physical activity using invasive or non-invasive methods. Consistent with scoping review methodology, diverse study designs were included, and no formal risk-of-bias assessment was performed.ResultsEleven studies involving 2,229 participants were included. Evidence encompassed interventional, observational, and methodological studies conducted in male healthy adults, athletes, older individuals, and populations with cardiovascular risk. VAC was assessed using multiple approaches, most commonly the arterial elastance/end-systolic elastance (Ea/Ees) ratio and pulse wave velocity/global longitudinal strain (PWV/GLS). Exercise exposure ranged from acute stress testing to structured training and lifelong physical activity. Substantial heterogeneity was observed in study designs, exercise contexts, and VAC measurement techniques. Across studies, physically active and endurance-trained individuals demonstrated preserved or optimised VAC, with aerobic exercise associated with improved ventricular efficiency and reduced arterial load, while VAC remained relatively stable during acute haemodynamic stress.ConclusionsThe literature relating exercise and VAC is conceptually and methodologically heterogeneous. Available evidence suggests that aerobic exercise and sustained physical activity are associated with preserved or favourable VAC profiles across male adult populations; however, causal inferences remain limited. This scoping review highlights important methodological gaps and provides a framework to guide future mechanistic and longitudinal research.