Literature DB >> 25070347

Effects of exercise on central aortic pressure before and after treatment with renin-angiotensin system blockade in patients with hypertension.

Peter S Lacy1, Patrick Brunel2, Fabio Baschiera2, Jaco Botha2, Bryan Williams3.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Brachial blood pressure increases with exercise and an excessive rise predicts increased cardiovascular risk. Measurement of brachial blood pressure alone may exaggerate the true blood pressure elevation due to exercise-induced change to pressure amplification. Whether blood pressure-lowering treatment modulates pressure amplification during exercise is unknown.
METHODS: Thirty-two participants with stage 1-2 hypertension (mean age 59.2 years) received eight weeks' blood pressure lowering with either aliskiren (300mg, n=16) or valsartan (320mg, n=16). Brachial and central aortic pressure (CASP) were measured non-invasively during treadmill exercise (Bruce protocol) at baseline, after eight weeks' treatment and 48 hours following treatment withdrawal.
RESULTS: The rise in brachial blood pressure with exercise exceeded the rise in CASP, indicative of enhanced pressure amplification. Eight weeks' treatment elicited similar reductions in brachial blood pressure and CASP which did not differ between rest and peak exercise (p>0.05). The exercise-induced increase in systolic pressure amplification did not differ between baseline and following eight weeks' treatment (p>0.05). These effects remained unchanged following treatment withdrawal.
CONCLUSION: Blood pressure lowering does not directly influence the relationship between aortic and brachial pressure either at rest or during exercise in patients with hypertension, other than through proportionate lowering of both pressures. These effects remained unchanged 48 hours after a simulated missed medication dose.
© The Author(s) 2014.

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Keywords:  Hypertension; angiotensin receptor blocker; central aortic blood pressure; direct renin inhibitor; exercise test

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25070347     DOI: 10.1177/1470320314538879

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Renin Angiotensin Aldosterone Syst        ISSN: 1470-3203            Impact factor:   1.636


  1 in total

1.  Type 2 diabetes compromises the value of non-invasively measured augmentation index in predicting the severity of coronary artery disease: a hospital-based observational study.

Authors:  Sijing Wu; Yujie Zhou; Yueping Li; Yuyang Liu; Dongmei Shi; Xiaoli Liu; Wei Liu; Yi Yu; Shuo Jia
Journal:  BMC Cardiovasc Disord       Date:  2016-11-10       Impact factor: 2.298

  1 in total

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