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Cardiovascular stress reactivity tasks successfully predict the hypotensive response of isometric handgrip training in hypertensives
95
Citations
140
References
2013
Year
HypertensionPressure MeasurementIsometric Handgrip TrainingHypotensive ResponseCardiovascular FunctionBlood PressureKinesiologyExerciseApplied PhysiologyCardiologyHealth SciencesBlood Pressure MonitoringPhysical FitnessIsometric HandgripClinical Exercise PhysiologyAntihypertensive TherapyHypertensive EmergenciesCardiovascular ReactivityRehabilitationHuman PhysiologyCardiovascular DiseaseExercise PhysiologyPhysiologyBlood Pressure ControlCardiovascular PhysiologyMedicine
This study aimed to determine whether: (a) isometric handgrip (IHG) training lowers resting blood pressure (BP), (b) cardiovascular reactivity to a serial subtraction (SST), IHG (IHGT), and cold pressor (CPT) task predicts this hypotensive response, and (c) cardiovascular reactivity is attenuated posttraining. Resting BP and cardiovascular reactivity to a SST, IHGT, and CPT were measured in 24 hypertensives (51-74 years) before and after 10 weeks of IHG training (n = 12) or control (n = 12). IHG training lowered resting BP (Δ8/5 mmHg), whereby the decrease in systolic BP was correlated to pretraining systolic BP reactivity to the SST (r = -.85) and IHGT (r = -.79; all ps < .01), but not the CPT (r = .34; p > .01). Furthermore, following IHG training, systolic BP reactivity to the SST (Δ7 mmHg) and IHGT (Δ8 mmHg) was reduced (all ps < .01). The results offer promising implications for hypertensives and may provide a tool to identify IHG training responders.
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