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Blood Pressure Response to Exercise As a Predictor of Hypertension

Overview
Journal Arch Intern Med
Specialty General Medicine
Date 1986 Oct 1
PMID 3532987
Citations 13
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Abstract

Published studies of the blood pressure response to exercise were reviewed to assess the probability of future hypertension in a subject with a "hypertensive" response to exercise. The reviewed data indicate that the sensitivity of a hypertensive response to exercise for future hypertension varied between 16% and 60%, and the specificity between 53% and 95%. The prevalence of hypertension on follow-up among normotensive subjects with a hypertensive response to exercise testing was 2.06 to 3.39 times higher than that among subjects with a normotensive response. Therefore, blood pressure response to exercise does have a predictive value for future hypertension. However, this predictive value is limited, since 38.1% to 89.3% of those with a hypertensive response to exercise did not have hypertension on follow-up, and a normotensive response only marginally reduced the risk of future hypertension. The use of exercise testing as a predictor of hypertension is still in need of experimental development and confirmation.

Citing Articles

Exaggerated Blood Pressure Response to Exercise Is a Risk of Future Hypertension Even in Healthy, Normotensive Young Individuals-Potential Preventive Strategies for This Phenomenon?.

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Exercise-Induced Blood Pressure Dynamics: Insights from the General Population and the Athletic Cohort.

Pesova P, Jiravska Godula B, Jiravsky O, Jelinek L, Sovova M, Moravcova K J Cardiovasc Dev Dis. 2023; 10(12).

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Pulmonary Vascular Response Patterns to Exercise: Is there a Role for Pulmonary Arterial Pressure Assessment during Exercise in the Post-Dana Point Era?.

Lewis G Adv Pulm Hypertens. 2021; 9(2):92-100.

PMID: 34422153 PMC: 8375586. DOI: 10.21693/1933-088X-9.2.92.


Depiction of Physiological Homeostasis by Self-Coupled System and Its Significance.

Lu X, Jin G, Chen W, Yu X, Ling F Front Physiol. 2019; 10:1205.

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Exercise Blood Pressure Guidelines: Time to Re-evaluate What is Normal and Exaggerated?.

Currie K, Floras J, La Gerche A, Goodman J Sports Med. 2018; 48(8):1763-1771.

PMID: 29574665 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-018-0900-x.