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Exercise Intensity and Blood Pressure During Sleep
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2008
Year
Sleep DisordersHypertensionPhysical ActivityBlood Pressure VariabilityBlood PressureSleep MedicineKinesiologyExerciseIntense Exercise TrialPhysical ExerciseApplied PhysiologyClinical ExerciseSport PhysiologyHealth SciencesBlood Pressure MonitoringSleepAmbulatory Blood PressurePhysical FitnessClinical Exercise PhysiologyCardiovascular ReactivitySleep Disordered BreathingExercise ScienceExercise IntensitySleep DisorderPhysiologyExercise PhysiologyMedicine
Exercise, of appropriate intensity and duration, could help maintain normotension if post-exercise hypotension persists over subsequent everyday activities. Therefore, we monitored ambulatory blood pressure (BP) for 24 h following four separate exercise bouts which differed in intensity, duration and total work completed. At 08:00 h, six normotensive males completed a no exercise control and, in two further trials, 30 min of cycling at 70 % V O (2 peak) and 40 % V O (2 peak). A fourth trial involved cycling at 40 % V O (2 peak) for a time which equated total work with that in the most intense exercise trial. Between 20 min and 24 h after exercise, ambulatory BP, heart rate (HR) and wrist-activity were compared between trials using general linear models. Participants slept normally at night. Post-exercise changes in BP and HR were not affected by exercise intensity or total work completed from 20 min after exercise until nocturnal sleep-onset (p > 0.21). During sleep, mean arterial BP was lower following exercise at 70 % V O (2 peak) compared to the other trials (p = 0.03), including the 40 % V O (2 peak) trial equated for total work (90 % CI for difference = - 22.1 to - 0.1). We conclude that daytime exercise can elicit a physiologically meaningful lower BP during sleep and exercise intensity is the most important factor in this phenomenon.