More Muscle Means Better
Regulation of Blood Pressure
People with more muscle than fat have increased ability to regulate
their blood pressure in response to stress, according to a Medical
College of Georgia study.
"Fitness facilitates the ability to regulate blood pressure;
fatness impedes your ability to regulate blood pressure through
your ability to regulate sodium," says Dr. Gregory Harshfield,
hypertension researcher and second author on the study in the
November issue of the American Journal of Hypertension.
"When you are under stress, your blood pressure should go up
and when the stress is over, it should come back down," says Martha
Wilson, research manager and the study's lead author. "Look at
the Olympic athletes. Certainly their pressures are up when they
are swimming or running or doing gymnastics, but I'm sure their
pressures come back down relatively quickly afterward."
Previous studies have made the seemingly odd link between lean
body mass and higher blood pressure in adults and children. And
when the MCG researchers started analyzing their data on how 127
young adults with normal blood pressure responded to stress, they
found the same thing. "I thought the data was wrong," says Dr.
Harshfield.
What might be wrong is the notion that an increase in blood pressure
is bad. "If you think about it, that concept doesn't make sense,"
Dr. Harshfield says. "If you are in a stressful situation, your
blood pressure should go up. If it doesn't, then you do have a
problem," he says, referencing the natural fight-or-flight mechanism
that enables more blood and oxygen to get to the body during stress.
When the researchers looked at the percentages of fat and lean
tissue on their study participants and looked at their ability
to excrete sodium – the primary mechanism for dropping blood pressure
back to normal – they found those with more fat had a decreased
ability to excrete sodium.
MCG researchers say lean body mass may have gotten a bad rap
because previous studies looked at casual blood pressure and did
not factor in fat's contribution. Not unlike building muscle in
response to lifting heavier weights, the body also builds more
lean tissue to support more fat. "The argument was that you have
to have greater lean mass to carry the greater fat mass, so it
was really the greater fat mass that was the culprit," Dr. Harshfield
says. "I am sure this is true, particularly in adults."
Fat, especially abdominal fat, secretes angiotensin which makes
angiotensin II, a powerful vasoconstrictor that also directs the
kidneys to absorb more sodium so blood vessels retain more fluid
volume, says Dr. Harshfield, who is principal investigator on
a separate National Institutes of Health grant looking at how
fat contributes to high blood pressure. Research he published
in 2003 in Hypertension also shows that overweight boys have greater
blood pressure increase in response to stress than their female
peers and decreased ability to return to normal.
For the newly published study, researchers measured the blood
pressure of study participants every 15 minutes throughout a two-hour
baseline period, an hour of competitive video games and a two-hour
recovery period.
They found that while blood pressure increased an appropriate
average of 5 percent in response to the stress of video games,
participants who had more lean muscle mass than fat were better
able to return to normal levels through this sodium excretion
process called natriuresis.
Previous studies by Dr. Harshfield have shown that race also
contributes to elevated pressures following stress because of
blacks' reduced ability to excrete sodium. The new study shows
that high body fat is another independent predictor of the abnormal
response.
"The major finding of this study is that body composition is
related to the pressure natriuresis response to mental stress,"
the researchers write. "Specifically, (lean body mass) was associated
with higher (blood pressure) during stress. In contrast, greater
body fat was associated with a slower natriuretic response to
stress as well as slower natriuresis during stress, which is in
part related to (angiotensis II)."
Those findings point back to the adage that fitness is good and
should start early in life, Mrs. Wilson says.
Reference
Source 125
November 24, 2004
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