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Submaximal Exercise Systolic Blood Pressure and Heart Rate at 20 Years of Follow‐up: Correlates in the Framingham Heart Study

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2016

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John Wiley and Sons Inc.
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Spartano, Nicole L., Asya Lyass, Martin G. Larson, Gregory D. Lewis, and Ramachandran S. Vasan. 2016. “Submaximal Exercise Systolic Blood Pressure and Heart Rate at 20 Years of Follow‐up: Correlates in the Framingham Heart Study.” Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease 5 (6): e002821. doi:10.1161/JAHA.115.002821. http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.115.002821.

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Abstract

Background: Beyond their resting values, exercise responses in blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) may add prognostic information for cardiovascular disease (CVD). In cross‐sectional studies, exercise BP and HR responses correlate with CVD risk factors; however, it is unclear which factors influence longitudinal changes in exercise responses over time, which is important for our understanding of the development of CVD. Methods and Results: We assessed BP and HR responses to low‐level exercise tests (6‐minute Bruce protocol) in 1231 Framingham Offspring participants (55% women) who underwent a routine treadmill test in 1979–1983 (baseline; mean age 39±8 years) that was repeated in 1998–2001 (follow‐up; mean age 58±8 years). Adjusting for baseline exercise responses, we related the follow‐up exercise responses to baseline CVD risk factors and to their changes between examinations. Compared with men, women had greater rise in exercise systolic (S)BP and HR at 20‐year follow‐up (both P<0.005). Baseline blood lipid levels, resting SBP and HR, and smoking status were associated with greater exercise SBP at follow‐up (all P<0.05). Weight gain across examinations was associated with higher exercise SBP and HR at follow‐up (both P<0.0001). Smoking cessation was associated with a 53% reduced risk of attaining the highest quartile of exercise SBP (≥180 mm Hg) at follow‐up (P<0.05). Conclusion: An adverse CVD risk factor profile in young adults and its worsening over time were associated with higher SBP and HR responses to low‐level exercise in midlife. Maintaining or adopting a healthy risk factor profile may favorably impact the exercise responses over time.

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aging, blood pressure, epidemiology, exercise, heart rate, risk factors, Aging, Epidemiology, Exercise, Risk Factors, Blood Pressure

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