Bastien Grobéty1, Erik Konrad Grasser2, Gayathri Yepuri1, Abdul G Dulloo1, Jean-Pierre Montani1. 1. Department of Medicine, Division of Physiology, Laboratory of Integrative Cardiovascular and Metabolic Physiology, University of Fribourg, 1700 Fribourg, Switzerland. 2. Department of Medicine, Division of Physiology, Laboratory of Integrative Cardiovascular and Metabolic Physiology, University of Fribourg, 1700 Fribourg, Switzerland. Electronic address: erikkonrad.grasser@unifr.ch.
Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: An important consequence of ageing is a tendency for postprandial blood pressure to decline, which can lead to fainting. As a possible countermeasure, we investigated in healthy older adults the impact of drinking water before a breakfast meal on postprandial cardiovascular and autonomic functions. METHODS: After a stable cardiovascular baseline recording for at least 20 min, twelve older adult (67 ± 1 y) test subjects ingested, in a crossover study design, either 100 mL or 500 mL of tap water over 4 min, which was followed by the consumption of the test breakfast meal (1708 kJ) over a period of 15 min. Then, cardiovascular recordings were resumed for 90 min after the meal. Eleven young (25 ± 1 y) and healthy subjects served as a control group. Measurements included beat-to-beat blood pressure, heart rate, impedance cardiography and autonomic variables. RESULTS: In older adults, systolic and diastolic blood pressure started to decline around 30 min after the meal, with the lowest values around 60 min; these effects were not observed in the young control group. Postprandial systolic blood pressure decreased between 30 and 90 min to a greater extent in response to 100 mL than to 500 mL (-6.4 vs. -3.3 mmHg, P < 0.05). Drinking 500 mL of water tended to increase stroke volume, cardiac output and vagal markers to a greater extent than 100 mL. CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest that drinking a large volume (500 mL) of water before a meal may attenuate postprandial hypotension in older adults.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND & AIMS: An important consequence of ageing is a tendency for postprandial blood pressure to decline, which can lead to fainting. As a possible countermeasure, we investigated in healthy older adults the impact of drinking water before a breakfast meal on postprandial cardiovascular and autonomic functions. METHODS: After a stable cardiovascular baseline recording for at least 20 min, twelve older adult (67 ± 1 y) test subjects ingested, in a crossover study design, either 100 mL or 500 mL of tapwater over 4 min, which was followed by the consumption of the test breakfast meal (1708 kJ) over a period of 15 min. Then, cardiovascular recordings were resumed for 90 min after the meal. Eleven young (25 ± 1 y) and healthy subjects served as a control group. Measurements included beat-to-beat blood pressure, heart rate, impedance cardiography and autonomic variables. RESULTS: In older adults, systolic and diastolic blood pressure started to decline around 30 min after the meal, with the lowest values around 60 min; these effects were not observed in the young control group. Postprandial systolic blood pressure decreased between 30 and 90 min to a greater extent in response to 100 mL than to 500 mL (-6.4 vs. -3.3 mmHg, P < 0.05). Drinking 500 mL of water tended to increase stroke volume, cardiac output and vagal markers to a greater extent than 100 mL. CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest that drinking a large volume (500 mL) of water before a meal may attenuate postprandial hypotension in older adults.
Authors: Laurence G Trahair; Sharmalar Rajendran; Renuka Visvanathan; Matthew Chapman; Daniel Stadler; Michael Horowitz; Karen L Jones Journal: Physiol Rep Date: 2017-07