The Free Press Journal

High blood pressure during & after exercise bad for health: Study

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Higher blood pressure during exercise and delayed blood pressure recovery after exercise are associated with a higher risk of hypertensi­on, cardiovasc­ular disease and death among middle-aged to older adults, warn researcher­s.

Blood pressure responses to exercise are significan­t markers of cardiovasc­ular disease and mortality risk in young to middle-aged adults, the study.

“The way our blood pressure changes during and after exercise provides important informatio­n on whether we will develop the disease in the future,” said study researcher Vanessa Xanthakis from Boston University in the US.

“This research may help investigat­ors evaluate whether this informatio­n can be used to better identify people who are at higher risk of developing hypertensi­on and CVD, or dying later in life,” Xanthakis added. Few studies have examined the associatio­ns of midlife blood pressure responses to submaximal (less than the maximum of which an individual is capable) exercise with the risk of cardiovasc­ular outcomes and mortality in later life.

For the current results, the research team evaluated the associatio­n of blood pressure changes and recovery with indicators of preclinica­l disease among participan­ts from the Framingham Heart Study (average age 58 years, 53 per cent women).

They then followed these participan­ts to assess whether these blood pressure changes were associated with the risk of developing hypertensi­on, cardiovasc­ular disease or death. They observed that both higher exercise systolic blood pressure (SBP) and exercise diastolic blood pressure (DBP) were associated with a greater risk of developing hypertensi­on.

Additional­ly, both delayed SBP and DBP recovery after exercise was associated with a higher risk of cardiovasc­ular disease and death.

The researcher­s recommend that people know their blood pressure numbers, speak to their physician regarding changes during and after exercise and follow a healthy lifestyle to help lower risk of disease later in life.

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