Bewegen
verlaagt de bloeddruk bij senioren.*
Uit een
wetenschappelijk onderzoek blijkt dat 6 maanden lang fitness oefeningen de
diastolische bloeddruk doet verlagen. De systolische bloeddruk verandert
daardoor bij senioren nauwelijks.
Effect
of Exercise on Blood Pressure in Older Persons
A Randomized
Controlled Trial
Kerry J. Stewart, EdD; Anita C. Bacher,
MSN, MPH; Katherine L. Turner, MS; Jerome L. Fleg, MD; Paul S. Hees, PhD; Edward
P. Shapiro, MD; Matthew Tayback, ScD
;
Pamela Ouyang, MD
Arch Intern Med. 2005;165:756-762.
Background Because of age-related
differences in the cause of hypertension, it is uncertain whether
current exercise guidelines for reducing blood pressure (BP) are
applicable to older persons. Few exercise studies in older persons
have evaluated BP changes in relation to changes in body composition
or fitness.
Methods This was a 6-month randomized
controlled trial of combined aerobic and resistance training;
controls followed usual care physical activity and diet advice.
Participants (aged 55-75 years) had untreated systolic BP (SBP) of
130 to 159 mm Hg or diastolic BP (DBP) of 85 to 99 mm Hg.
Results Fifty-one exercisers and 53
controls completed the trial. Exercisers significantly improved
aerobic and strength fitness, increased lean mass, and reduced
general and abdominal obesity. Mean decreases in SBP and DBP,
respectively, were 5.3 and 3.7 mm Hg among exercisers and 4.5 and 1.5
mm Hg among controls (P < .001 for all). There
were no significant group differences in mean SBP change from
baseline (–0.8 mm Hg; P=.67). The mean DBP reduction was
greater among exercisers (–2.2 mm Hg; P=.02). Aortic
stiffness, indexed by aortofemoral pulse-wave velocity, was unchanged
in both groups. Body composition improvements explained 8% of the SBP
reduction (P = .006) and 17% of the DBP reduction (P<.001).
Conclusions A 6-month program of
aerobic and resistance training lowered DBP but not SBP in older
adults with mild hypertension more than in controls. The concomitant
lack of improvement in aortic stiffness in exercisers suggests that
older persons may be resistant to exercise-induced reductions in SBP.
Body composition improvements were associated with BP reductions and
may be a pathway by which exercise training improves cardiovascular
health in older men and women.
Author Affiliations: Divisions of
Cardiology (Drs Stewart, Hees, Shapiro, and Ouyang and Mss Bacher and Turner)
and Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology (Dr Tayback), Department of Medicine, The
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, and Gerontology Research Center, National
Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health (Dr Fleg), Baltimore, Md. Dr
Fleg is now with the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.
Deceased.
(April 2005)