| Literature DB >> 29910415 |
Breno Q Farah1,2, Antônio H Germano-Soares3, Sergio Luiz C Rodrigues4, Camila X Santos5, Sávio S Barbosa6, Lauro C Vianna7, Véronique A Cornelissen8, Raphael M Ritti-Dias9,10.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to describe, through a systematic review, the acute and chronic effects of isometric handgrip exercise on cardiovascular variables in hypertensive individuals. In this systematic review, we included studies that analyzed whether a single bout or a program with isometric exercises affect cardiovascular variables in hypertensive adults. The electronic database PubMed/Medline was searched for relevant studies published until May 2017. Of the 2927 studies initially identified, 2916 were excluded based on title and abstract and five on the basis of full-text assessment, leaving six studies remaining. In addition, one further study cited in the references of the included articles was included in this review, totaling seven studies included (five studies on the chronic effects of isometric handgrip exercise on cardiovascular parameters). None of the acute studies observed post-exercise hypotension. The majority of the chronic studies found decreases in office blood pressure after isometric handgrip training, with training ranging from 6 to 10 weeks, while heart rate variability parameters were improved in one study and did not change in another. Reduction in oxidative stress was observed; however, this variable was only analyzed in one study. In hypertensives, acute responses to isometric handgrip exercise are very limited due to the small number of studies, therefore more research is required. Furthermore, chronic isometric handgrip training reduces blood pressure; however, there is still a gap in the knowledge on the effects of this modality of exercise on other cardiovascular variables-such as endothelial function, oxidative stress, and cardiac autonomic modulation-which should be addressed in future studies.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular variables; exercise; hypertension
Year: 2017 PMID: 29910415 PMCID: PMC5968957 DOI: 10.3390/sports5030055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4663
Figure 1Literature search strategy used for the PubMed database.
Figure 2Identification and selection of articles included in the review.
General characteristics of the studies included in the review.
| Author (year) | Session/Groups | Age (Years) | Baseline SBP | Baseline DBP | N | Sex | R | Duration of Hypertension | Medicine | Quality Score (%) * |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Olher et al., (2013) [ | HS e CS | 64 ± 1 | 121 ± 7 | 72 ± 6 | 12 | Female | Yes | NI | βb, ACE, Diu, ARB and CCB | 7 (100.0) |
| Porro et al., (1995) [ | HS | 43 ± 3 | Ndip—144 ± 3 | Ndip—96 ± 3 | 50 | Both | NA | NI | NI | 3 (42.9) |
| Carlson et al., (2016) [ | GC | CG—54 ± 8 | CG—128 ± 15 | CG—74 ± 9 | CG—20 | Both | Yes | NI | ACE, Diu, ARB, CCB, αAA and unmedicated | 10 (66.7) |
| Badrov et al., (2013) [ | GC | CG—63 ± 9 | CG—130 ± 17 | CG—73 ± 12 | CG—12 | Both | Yes | ≥4 months | ACE, Diu, CCB, and unmedicated | 13 (86.7) |
| Stiller-Moldovan et al., (2012) [ | CG | CG—63 ± 6 | CG—118 ± 14 | CG—68 ± 4 | CG—9 | Both | Yes | >4 months | βb, ACE, Diu, ARB and CCB | 10 (66.7) |
| Peters et al., (2006) [ | TG | 52 ± 5 | 146 ± 11 | 90 ± 7 | 10 | Both | NA | >6 months | NI | 6 (40.0) |
| Taylor et al., (2003) [ | CG | CG—64 ± 6 | CG—152 ± 8 | CG—87 ± 11 | CG—8 | Both | Yes | CG—9.2 years | βb, ACE, Diu, CCB, and unmedicated | 11 (11.3) |
R—randomization; NA—not applicable; HS—handgrip session; CS—control session; CG—control group; TG—training group; Ndip—non-dippers; Dip—dippers; NI—not informed; βb—β-blocker; ACE—angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor; Diu—diuretic; CCB—Calcium channel blocker; ARB—angiotensin receptor blocker; * TESTEX scale score and percentage in relation to the total.
Characteristics of the physical training program and the main results of the acute studies included in the review.
| Author (Year) | Session | Variables Analyzed | Exercise Protocol | Assessment Duration | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Olher et al., (2013) [ | HS1, HS2, and CS | SBP, DBP, MBP, HR, and RPP | HS1 = 20 × 10 s; RI NI; 30% MVC. | 60 min | HS1, HS2 e SC = → SBP, DBP, MBP, HR, and RPP. |
| Porro et al., (1995) [ | HS | SVR and CI | 1 × 3 min; 30% MVC | 24 h | Non-dippers = ↑ SVR and CI |
HS—handgrip session; HS1—HS with 30% of MVC; HS2—HS with 50% of MVC; CS—control session; MVC—maximal voluntary capacity; RI—recovery interval; SBP—systolic blood pressure; DBP—diastolic blood pressure; MBP—mean blood pressure; HR—heart rate; RPP—rate pressure product; SVR—systemic vascular resistance; CI—cardiac index.
Characteristics of the physical training program and the main results of the chronic studies included in the review.
| Author | Variables Analysed | Training Protocol | Frequency | Duration | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carlson et al., (2016) [ | SBP, DBP, MBP, and HR | UN arms:4 × 2 min.; 3 min. RI; 30% MVC. | 3 × / weeks | 8 weeks | ↓ SBP, MBP |
| Badrov et al., (2013) [ | SBP, DBP, MBP, and PP | Alternated arms: 4 × 2 min.; 1 min. RI; 30% MVC. | 3 × / weeks | 10 weeks | ↓ SBP, DBP, MBP, and PP (at rest) ↓ SBP (mental and physical stress) |
| Stiller-Moldovan et al., (2012) [ | SBP, DBP, MBP (clinic and 24 h), and HRV | Alternated arms: 4 × 2 min.; 1 min. RI; 30% MVC. | 3 × / weeks | 8 weeks | →SBP, DBP, MBP (clinic and 24 h), and → HRV |
| Peters et al., (2006) [ | SBP, DBP, MBP, and oxidative stress | Alternated arms: 4 × 45 s; 1 min. RI; 50% MVC. | 3 × /weeks | 6 weeks | ↓ SBP, and oxidative stress → DBP and MBP |
| Taylor et al., (2003) [ | SBP, DBP, MBP, HRV, and BPV | Alternated arms: 4 × 2 min.; 1 min. RI; 30% MVC. | 3 × / weeks | 10 weeks | ↓ SBP and MBP; →DBP; ↑ HRV and BPV |
SBP—systolic blood pressure; DBP—diastolic blood pressure; MBP—mean blood pressure; HR—heart rate; HRV—heart rate variability; BPV—BP variability; RI—recovery interval; MVC—maximal voluntary capacity; PP—pulse pressure; UN—uniformed.