Physical activity, including aerobic, resistance, and concurrent exercise, reduces blood pressure across all blood pressure categories, with the greatest reductions observed in individuals with established hypertension.
Does physical activity improve blood pressure in patients with hypertension?
Physical activity is an effective adjunctive treatment for hypertension, including treatment-resistant cases, highlighting a gap in current clinical guidelines.
Hypertension and physical inactivity are leading causes of premature mortality. While both are modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular disease, their prevalence remains high. As populations grow older, they are more likely to develop hypertension and to become less physically active. Scientific advances have contributed to understanding of how physical activity improves blood pressure and the clinically relevant ambulatory blood pressure, but this is not reflected in hypertension guidelines for clinical management of hypertension. The aim of this paper is to clearly present up to date knowledge from scientific studies that underpin the role of physical activity in hypertension management. Longitudinal studies in this review demonstrate a protective effect of higher physical activity levels as well as higher levels of cardiorespiratory fitness. Interventional studies report improvements in blood pressure associated with aerobic, resistance and concurrent exercise; the improvements in some studies were greatest among participant groups with established hypertensions; the effect was observed for groups with treatment-resistant hypertension also, a clinically important subgroup. The most recent research provides evidence for the synergy between physical activity and pharmacotherapy for the treatment of hypertension, providing an opportunity for clinicians to promote physical activity as an adjunctive treatment for hypertension as well as a preventative strategy. This review critiques the evidence and summarises the most up to date literature in the field of physical activity and hypertension.
Hayes et al. (Mon,) conducted a review in Hypertension. Physical activity vs. Physical inactivity was evaluated on Blood pressure reduction. Physical activity, including aerobic, resistance, and concurrent exercise, reduces blood pressure across all blood pressure categories, with the greatest reductions observed in individuals with established hypertension.
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