Does regular aerobic exercise improve brachial artery flow-mediated dilation in middle-aged and older men and post-menopausal women without CVD?
Sedentary middle-aged and older (MA/O) men and post-menopausal women without CVD, age 55-79 years
8 weeks of brisk walking (6 days/week for approx. 50 min/day) or endurance-exercise-training
Non-exercising controls / sedentary lifestyle
Brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD)surrogate
Habitual aerobic exercise improves endothelial function in middle-aged and older men, but post-menopausal women may be less responsive to this cardiovascular benefit.
Brachial artery FMD (flow-mediated dilation) is impaired with aging and is associated with an increased risk of CVD (cardiovascular disease). In the present study, we determined whether regular aerobic exercise improves brachial artery FMD in MA/O (middle-aged/older) men and post-menopausal women. In sedentary MA/O adults (age, 55-79 years) without CVD, 8 weeks of brisk walking (6 days/week for approx. 50 min/day; randomized controlled design) increased treadmill time approx. 20% in both MA/O men (n=11) and post-menopausal women (n=15) (P50% in the MA/O men (from 4.6±0.6 to 7.1±0.6%; P<0.01), but did not change in the post-menopausal women (5.1±0.8 compared with 5.4±0.7%; P=0.50). No changes occurred in the non-exercising controls. In a separate cross-sectional study (n=167), brachial artery FMD was approx. 50% greater in endurance-exercise-trained (6.4±0.4%; n=45) compared with sedentary (4.3±0.3%; n=60) MA/O men (P<0.001), whereas there were no differences between endurance-trained (5.3±0.7%, n=20) and sedentary (5.6±0.5%, n=42) post-menopausal women (P=0.70). Brachial artery lumen diameter, peak hyperaemic shear rate and endothelium-independent dilation did not differ with exercise intervention or in the endurance exercise compared with sedentary groups. In conclusion, regular aerobic exercise is consistently associated with enhanced brachial artery FMD in MA/O men, but not in post-menopausal women. Some post-menopausal women without CVD may be less responsive to habitual aerobic exercise than MA/O men.
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Pierce et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d07eb7632f68323204f56a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1042/cs20100174
Gary L. Pierce
Vascular Medicine
Iratxe Eskurza
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Ashley E. Walker
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Clinical Science
University of Colorado Boulder
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