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 "e;Ventricular Function at Rest and During Exercise"e;. We have chosen the general term "e;ventricular function"e;, 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"e;"e;-----,--------------, >- "e; 5 ~, ~ ~, ~ '~ I o u f--~__;_;IJ"e;_'_~'"e;'"e;* 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.