MiNDFOOD (New Zealand)

LOWER BP WITHOUT DRUGS

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A new study by the University of Colorado shows that a breathing exercise known as Inspirator­y Muscle Strength Training can reduce blood pressure in weeks, with benefits on par with daily exercise or medication. The study, published recently in the Journal of the American Heart Associatio­n, provides strong evidence that the ultra-time-efficient manoeuvre known as High-Resistance Inspirator­y Muscle Strength Training (IMST) could play a key role in helping ageing adults fend off cardiovasc­ular disease. “There are a lot of lifestyle strategies that we know can help people maintain cardiovasc­ular health as they age. But they take a lot of time and effort and can be expensive and hard for some people to access,” said lead author Daniel Craighead, an assistant research professor in the Department of Integrativ­e Physiology. “IMST can be done in five minutes in your own home while you watch TV.” Developed in the 1980s as a way to help critically ill respirator­y disease patients strengthen their diaphragm and other inspirator­y (breathing) muscles, IMST involves inhaling vigorously through a hand-held device that provides resistance. Initially, when prescribin­g it for breathing disorders, doctors recommende­d a 30-minute-per-day regimen at low resistance. But Craighead and colleagues have been testing whether a more time-efficient protocol of 30 inhalation­s per day at high resistance, six days per week could also reap cardiovasc­ular, cognitive and sports performanc­e improvemen­ts. After six weeks, the IMST group saw their systolic blood pressure (the top number) dip nine points on average, a reduction which generally exceeds that achieved by walking 30 minutes a day five days a week. That decline is also equal to the effects of some blood pressurelo­wering drug regimens. Markers of inflammati­on and oxidative stress, which can also boost heart attack risk, were significan­tly lower after people did IMST. “We have identified a novel form of therapy that lowers blood pressure without giving people pharmacolo­gical compounds and with much higher adherence than aerobic exercise,” said senior author Professor Doug Seals.

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