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Effects of Isometric Leg Training on Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Morning Blood Pressure Surge in Young Normotensive Men and Women : Isometric Training & Morning BP Surge

Title: Effects of Isometric Leg Training on Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Morning Blood Pressure Surge in Young Normotensive Men and Women : Isometric Training & Morning BP Surge
Authors: Baross, Anthony; Brook, Robert, D.; Kay, A D; Howden, Reuben; Gailard, Ebony C.; Gordon, Ben D. H.; Milne, Kevin; McGowan, Cheri; Swaine, Ian L
Publication Year: 2022
Collection: The University of Northampton: NECTAR - Northampton Electronic Collection of Theses and Research
Description: Despite the reported association between diurnal variations in ambulatory blood pressure (BP) and elevated cardiovascular disease risk, little is known regarding the effects of isometric resistance training (IRT), a practical BP-lowering intervention, on ambulatory BP and morning BP surge (MBPS). Thus, we investigated whether (i) IRT causes reductions in ambulatory BP and MBPS, in young normotensives, and (ii) if there are any sex differences in these changes. Twenty normotensive individuals (mean 24-h SBP = 121 ± 7, DBP = 67 ± 6 mmHg) undertook 10-weeks of bilateral-leg IRT (4 × 2-min/2-min rest, at 20% maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) 3 days/week). Ambulatory BP and MBPS (mean systolic BP (SBP) 2 h after waking minus the lowest sleeping 1 h mean SBP) was measures pre- and post-training. There were significant reductions in 24-h ambulatory SBP in men (- 4 ± 2 mmHg, P = 0.0001) and women (- 4 ± 2 mmHg, P = 0.0001) following IRT. Significant reductions were also observed in MBPS (- 6 ± 8 mmHg, p = 0.044; - 6 ± 7 mmHg, P = 0.019), yet there were no significant differences between men and women in these changes, and 24-h ambulatory diastolic BP remained unchanged. Furthermore, a significant correlation was identified between the magnitude of the change in MBPS and the magnitude of changes in the mean 2-h SBP after waking for both men and women (men, r = 0.89, P = 0.001; women, r = 0.74, P = 0.014). These findings add further support to the idea that IRT, as practical lifestyle intervention, is effective in significantly lowering ambulatory SBP and MBPS and might reduce the incidence of adverse cardiovascular events that often occur in the morning.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: text
Language: English
Relation: https://nectar.northampton.ac.uk/id/eprint/15929/1/Baross_etal_Scientific_Reports_2022_Effects_of_isometric_leg_training_on_ambulatory_blood_pressure_and_morning_blood_pressure_surge_in_young_normotensive_men_and_women.pdf; Baross, A., Brook, R., D., Kay, A. D., Howden, R., Gailard, E. C., Gordon, B. D. H., Milne, K., McGowan, C. and Swaine, I. L. (2022) Effects of Isometric Leg Training on Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Morning Blood Pressure Surge in Young Normotensive Men and Women : Isometric Training & Morning BP Surge. Scientific Reports. 12 2045-2322.
Availability: https://nectar.northampton.ac.uk/id/eprint/15929/; https://nectar.northampton.ac.uk/id/eprint/15929/1/Baross_etal_Scientific_Reports_2022_Effects_of_isometric_leg_training_on_ambulatory_blood_pressure_and_morning_blood_pressure_surge_in_young_normotensive_men_and_women.pdf
Rights: cc_by
Accession Number: edsbas.200AF101
Database: BASE