Blood Pressure After Exercise
May Predict Heart Risk
Systolic blood pressure, the upper number
in a blood-pressure reading, during the recovery period after
exercise stress testing may help predict the risk of heart attack
in men, according to a report in the journal Hypertension.
"Systolic blood pressure during
recovery provides an incremental value to systolic blood pressure
measured at rest," Dr. Jari A. Laukkanen from University of Kuopio,
Finland stated.
Laukkanen and colleagues investigated
the usefulness of measuring systolic blood pressure after a standardized
cycle ergometer exercise test in predicting the risk of future
heart attack among 2336 men between the ages of 42 and 61 years
old.
Systolic blood pressure greater
than 195 mm Hg after two minutes of recovery was associated with
a 1.7-fold increased risk of heart attack, the report indicates.
Each 10 mm Hg increase after two minutes of recovery was associated
with a 7-percent increased risk of heart attack.
Men with the greatest difference
in systolic blood pressure between rest and recovery had a 39-percent
higher risk of heart attack than did men with the smallest difference,
the researchers note.
Increased systolic blood pressure
during exercise recovery "may help identify patients with slightly
raised resting systolic blood pressure where lifestyle changes
may be recommended," Laukkanen said.
This information can also be added
to conventional risk factors, such as ECG changes and chest pain,
observed during exercise testing, Laukkanen said.
SOURCE: Hypertension, December
2004.
Reference
Source 89
Dec 14, 2004
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