690 likes | 1.16k Views
Therapeutic role of exercise in treating hypertension. Dalynn T. Badenhop, Ph.D., FACSM Professor of Medicine Director , Cardiac Rehabilitation Medical College of Ohio. Educational Objectives. To explain the acute blood pressure response to exercise
E N D
Therapeutic role of exercise in treating hypertension Dalynn T. Badenhop, Ph.D., FACSM Professor of Medicine Director , Cardiac Rehabilitation Medical College of Ohio
Educational Objectives • To explain the acute blood pressure response to exercise • To list the mechanisms by which exercise may improve hypertension • To apply exercise guidelines in treating hypertension • To prescribe appropriate drug therapy for active hypertensive patients
Overview of Hypertension • High BP is a risk factor for stroke, CHF, angina, renal failure, LVH and MI • Hypertension clusters with hyperlipidemia, diabetes and obesity • Drugs have been effective in treating high BP but because of their side effects and cost, non-pharmacologic alternatives are attractive
Overview of Hypertension • Joint National Committee VI (JNC VI) on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (1997) • 50 million hypertensive patients in the U.S. • National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III (NHANES III) (1995) • only 21% of treated hypertensive patients have BP controlled to <140/90 mm Hg • 35% of hypertensive patients are unaware of their condition • High-normal BP is associated with an incresed risk of cardiovascular disease • N Eng J Med 2001; 345; 1291-7
Pathophysiology of Hypertension • Essential hypertension is characterized by increased DBP and related arteriolar vasoconstriction leading to increased SBP • BP is mainly determined by cardiac output and total peripheral resistance • High blood pressure may be linked to age-related vascular stiffening
Pathophysiology of Hypertension • High blood pressure is also associated with obesity, salt intake, low potassium intake, physical inactivity, heavy alcohol use and psychological stress • Intra-abdominal fat and hyperinsulinemia may play a role in the pathogenesis of hypertension
Prevalence of Other Risk Factors With Hypertension Kaplan NM. Dis Mon 1992; 38:769-838
Cardiovascular Consequences of Hypertension • Individuals with BP > 160/95 have CAD, PVD & stroke that is 3X higher than normal • HTN may lead to retinopathy and nephropathy • HTN is also associated with subclinical changes in the brain and thickening and stiffening of small blood vessels
Cardiovascular Consequences of Hypertension • Increased cardiac afterload leads to left ventricular hypertrophy and reduced early diastolic filling • Increased LV mass is positively associated with CV morbidity and mortality independent of other risk factors • High BP also promotes coronary artery calcification, a predictor of sudden death
Hypertension & CVD Outcomes • Increased BP has a positive and continuous association with CV events • Within DBP range of 70-110 mm Hg, there is no threshold below which lower BP does not reduce stroke and CVD risk • A 15/6 mm Hg BP reduction reduced stroke by 34% and CHD by 19% over 5 years
Lifestyle Changes for Hypertension • Reduce excess body weight • Reduce dietary sodium to < 2.4 gms/day • Maintain adequate dietary intake of potassium, calcium and magnesium • Limit daily alcohol consumption to < 2 oz. of whiskey, 10 oz. of wine, 24 oz. of beer • Exercise moderately each day • Engage in meditation or relaxation daily • Cessation of smoking
Medical Therapy and Implications for Exercise Training • Pharmacologic and nonpharmocologic treatment can reduce morbidity • Some antihypertensive agents have side-effects and some worsen other risk factors • Exercise and diet improve multiple risk factors with virtually no side-effects • Exercise may reduce or eliminate the need for antihypertensive medications
Exaggerated BP Response to Exercise • Among normotensive men who had an exercise test between 1971-1982, those who developed HTN in 1986 were 2.4 times more likely to have had an exaggerated BP response to exercise • Exaggerated BP response increased future hypertension risk by 300% after adjusting for all other risk factors
Exaggerated BP Response to Exercise • Exaggerated BP was change from rest in SBP >60 mm Hg at 6 METs; SBP > 70 mm Hg at 8 METs; DBP > 10 mm Hg at any workload. • Subjects in CARDIA study with exaggerated exercise BP were 1.7 times more likely to develop HTN 5 years later J Clin Epidemiol 51 (1): 1998
NIH Consensus Conference on Physical Activity and CV Health (1995) • Review of 47 studies of exercise and HTN • 70% of exercise groups decreased SBP by an avg. of 10.5 mm Hg from 154 • 78% of subjects decreased DBP by an avg. of 8.6 mm Hg from 98 • Only 1 study showed increased BP w/ EX • Beneficial responses are 80 times more frequent than negative responses Hagberg, J., et.al., NIH, 1995: 69-71
Increasing Lifestyle Activity for Patients with High-Normal Blood Pressure and Stage I Hypertension Medical College of Ohio Study Group Kevin A. Phelps, D.O. Larry Johnson, M.D. Sandra Puczynski, Ph.D. Dalynn Badenhop, Ph.D. Michael McCrea Wendy Boone, RN, M.P.H
Lifestyle Activity vs.Structured Exercise • JAMA 1999; 281(4): 327-334 • moderate-intensity lifestyle activity showed similar or better results versus structured exercise for • improved cardiovascular fitness • reduced body fat • decreased total cholesterol • reduced blood pressure • patient compliance • In the past five years the Surgeon General, CDC, NIH, and ACSM have published position statements on the potential health benefits of lifestyle activity
Study Design • Twenty-four week, physician-directed intervention program to lower BP by increasing physical activity • Patients randomized into two groups: • Group 1 - educational intervention monitored via activity logs • Group 2 - educational intervention monitored via activity logs and pedometer
The Pedometer • a small device worn at the waist that counts steps • used successfully in obesity studies
Study Hypotheses • Adding a pedometer • to goal setting will increase the level and frequency of physical activity • will improve BP control of adult patients with high-normal BP or Stage 1 HTN
Main Outcome Measures • Blood Pressure and BMI • Physical Activity assessed by: • two questionnaires • Physical Activity Recall Scale (PASE): assessed activity in past seven days • Physician-based Assessment and Counseling for Exercise (PACE) : assessed readiness for change in level of physical activity
Methods: Patient Identification • Potential subjects identified by chart audit • average BP of past three visits in High Normal BP or Stage 1 HTN category • Exclusion Criteria: • Antihypertensive med use • confirmed BP ³160/100 • Dx DM, CHF, CAD, CVD, CA, MR • pregnant • child (< 18 yrs)
Methods: Patient Recruitment • Identified subjects contacted during regularly scheduled physician visit • Physician introduced study to patient • Interested patients met with research assistant for more information about study
Methods: Patient Eligibility • Interested patients had two eligibility visits two weeks apart to confirm elevated BP • If average BP at two visits confirmed High-Normal BP or Stage 1 HTN from chart audit, then patient was scheduled for first study visit (t0)
Methods: Study Visits • Research Assistant • measured BP and weight, reviewed activity log at all visits • administered PASE and PACE at baseline and completion • Physician • discussed barriers to increasing activity • new activity goal setting • assisted with problem solving
Preliminary Results • Outcome measures analyzed at • beginning of study, week 0 (t0) • end of intervention period, week 12 (t1) • end of maintenance period, week 24 (t2)
Change in Systolic BP from Time 0 to Time 1 (12 weeks) for both groups P = .005
Change in Systolic BP across time for both groups (24 weeks)
Change in Diastolic BP from Time 0 to Time 1 for both groups (12 weeks)
Change in Diastolic BP across time for both groups (24 weeks)
Preliminary Conclusions • Intervention alone (Group 1) did not significantly improve BP • Intervention plus a pedometer (Group 2) significantly improved BP, but only with regular physician visits
Possible Mechanisms of BP Reduction with Exercise • Reduced visceral fat independent of changes in body weight or BMI • Altered renal function to increase elimination of sodium leading to reduce fluid volume • Anthropomorphic parameters may not be primary mechansims in causing HTN
Possible Mechanisms of BP Reduction with Exercise • Lower cardiac output and peripheral vascular resistance at rest and submaximal exercise • Decreased HR • Decreased sympathetic and increased parasympathetic tone • Lower blood catecholamines and plasma renin activity
Antihypertensive & Volume Depleting Effects of Mild Exercise on Essential HTN • 20 subjects with HTN (155/100) randomized to Exercise or Control group • Cycle Ergometer Exercise at Blood Lactic Acid Threshold for 60 min. 3X/wk for 10 weeks • Changes in BP, hemodynamics and humoral factors of EX group compared with control group Urata, H., et. al. Hypertension 9:245-252,1987
Antihypertensive & Volume Depleting Effects of Mild Exercise on Essential HTN
Antihypertensive & Volume Depleting Effects of Mild Exercise on Essential HTN • Whole blood and plasma volume indices were significantly reduced (p < 0.05) • Change in serum Na+:serum K+ positively correlated with change in SBP • Plasma NE concentrations at rest & Workload @ BLAT during GXT’s were reduced • Change in resting NE correlated with change in mean BP Urata, H., et. al. Hypertension 9:245-252, 1987
Changes in Taurine & other Amino Acids in Response to Mild Exercise • Blood pressures were significantly decreased by 14.8/6.6 mmHg in the EX group but not the Control group • Serum concentration increases of taurine (26%), cystine (287%), asparagine (11%), histidine (6%) and lysine (7%) in the EX • Serum taurine was negatively correlated with the change in plasma NE Tanabe, Y, et. al., Clin & Exper Hyper 11:149-165, 1989
Changes in Taurine & other Amino Acids in Response to Mild Exercise
Exercise Prescriptions for Patients With Borderline-to-Moderate Hypertension
Exercise Prescriptions for Patients With Borderline-to-Moderate Hypertension
Exercise Prescriptions for Patients With Borderline-to-Moderate Hypertension • Excessive rises in blood pressure should be avoided during exercise (SBP > 230 mm Hg; DBP > 110 mm Hg). Restrictions on participation in vigorous exercise should be placed on patients with left ventricular hypertrophy.