Long-term slow breathing exercise reduced office systolic (P<0.001) and diastolic (P<0.01) blood pressure and heart rate (P=0.004) in untreated hypertensive men, but did not alter resting MSNA.
Cohort (n=22)
Does device-guided slow breathing exercise improve blood pressure, heart rate, and muscle sympathetic nerve activity in untreated male patients with essential hypertension?
Long-term slow breathing exercise reduces office blood pressure and heart rate, and attenuates cardiovascular responses to mental stress in untreated hypertensive men, though it does not alter 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure or resting sympathetic nerve activity.
p-value: p=<0.001
OBJECTIVE: Acute slow breathing (SLOWB) affects sympathetic cardiovascular regulation, but its long-term effects are unknown. Using device-guided breathing we explored short-term and long-term SLOWB effects on blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR) and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in essential hypertension. METHODS: We measured BP, HR and MSNA in 10 hypertensive individuals at rest, during laboratory stressors, before and after acute SLOWB, and 8 weeks after SLOWB exercise. Twelve matched hypertensive controls underwent a similar protocol excluding SLOWB intervention. Office and 24-h BP were obtained at baseline and at follow-up. RESULTS: Acute SLOWB had no influence on BP, HR, but decreased MSNA (P < 0.01). BP, HR, MSNA responses to handgrip were comparable before and after acute SLOWB. Acute SLOWB tended to reduce SBP (P = 0.09), HR (P = 0.08), but not MSNA (P = 0.20) responses to mental stress. Long-term SLOWB decreased office SBP (P < 0.001), DBP (P < 0.01), HR (P = 0.004), but not 24-h BP. Resting MSNA was unchanged after long-term SLOWB (P = 0.68). Long-term SLOWB did not influence BP, HR or MSNA responses to handgrip and cold pressor, but reduced SBP (P = 0.03), HR (P = 0.03) responses to mental stress without MSNA changes. In controls BP, HR, MSNA responses to laboratory stressors remained unchanged at baseline and at follow-up. CONCLUSION: In essential hypertension, MSNA is reduced during acute SLOWB, but remains unaltered following long-term SLOWB. Long-term SLOWB reduces office, but not ambulatory BP and HR. SLOWB attenuates cardiovascular response to mental stress, but not physical stressors. These findings may be indicative of beneficial SLOWB effects on stress reduction in essential hypertension.
Hering et al. (Tue,) conducted a cohort in Essential hypertension (n=22). Slow breathing exercise (SLOWB) vs. Matched controls without SLOWB intervention was evaluated on Blood pressure, heart rate, and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) (p=<0.001). Long-term slow breathing exercise reduced office systolic (P<0.001) and diastolic (P<0.01) blood pressure and heart rate (P=0.004) in untreated hypertensive men, but did not alter resting MSNA.
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