Prevalence and significance of postexercise hypotension in apparently healthy subjects

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Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Vorkommen und Bedeutung des Blutdruckabfalls nach koerperlicher Belastung bei offensichtlich gesunden Personen
Autor:Fleg, Jerome L.; Lakatta, Edward G.
Erschienen in:American journal of cardiology
Veröffentlicht:57 (1986), S. 1380-1384, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:0002-9149, 1879-1913
Schlagworte:
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Erfassungsnummer:PU198910040771
Quelle:BISp
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Fleg, Jerome L.
A2  - Fleg, Jerome L.
A2  - Lakatta, Edward G.
DB  - BISp
DP  - BISp
KW  - Blutdruckabfall
KW  - Ergometerbelastung
KW  - Erholungsphase
KW  - Herz-Kreislauf-System
KW  - Hypotonie
KW  - Prognose
KW  - Sportmedizin
LA  - eng
TI  - Prevalence and significance of postexercise hypotension in apparently healthy subjects
TT  - Vorkommen und Bedeutung des Blutdruckabfalls nach koerperlicher Belastung bei offensichtlich gesunden Personen
PY  - 1986
N2  - Although a decrease in systolic blood pressure (BP) occurring during treadmill exercise is often a sign of severe left ventricular dysfunction, the prevalence and significance of postexertional hypotension is unclear. The postexercise systolic BP response to maximal treadmill exercise was analyzed in 781 asymptomatic volunteers, aged 21 to 96 years from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study on Aging. Fifteen subjects (1.9 ) had a postexercise decrease in systolic BP of at least 20 mm Hg from preexercise sitting values, to a level of 90 mm Hg or less. The prevalence of postexercise hypotension was 3.1 (14 of 449) in subjects younger than 55 years, but only 0.3 (1 of 332) in those older than 55. Before exercise these 15 subjects demonstrated a slight orthostatic decrease in systolic BP of -1.7 +/- 4.8 mm Hg compared with an increase of 5.3 +/- 5.1 mm Hg in age-matched control subjects. The lowest systolic BP averaged 78 +/- 9 mm Hg (range 62 to 90) and occurred between 4 and 9 minutes after exercise in 80 of cases. All but 3 episodes were symptomatic, with dizziness dominant. In only 2 subjects was the hypotension associated with vagal symptoms and bradycardia. Compared with control subjects, subjects with postexercise hypotensionhad higher maximal heart rates (184 +/- 15 vs 173 +/- 11 beats/min, p <0.05), but showed no difference in exercise tolerance or systolic BP at submaximal or maximal effort. Postexercise ST-segment abnormalities suggesting ischemia occurred in one-third of the hypotensive subjects but none of the control subjects. No subject with hypotension experienced cardiovascular morbidity or mortality over a follow-up period averaging 4 years. Thus, in a general population, hypotension after treadmill exercise occurs primarily in younger persons with high maximal heart rates. It may be a cause for an ischemic electrocardiographic response but appears to have a benign prognosis. Verf.-Referat
SP  - S. 1380-1384
SN  - 0002-9149
JO  - American journal of cardiology
VL  - 57
M3  - Gedruckte Ressource
ID  - PU198910040771
ER  -