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Low-intensity walking as mild medication for pressure control in prehypertensive and hypertensive subjects: how far shall we wander?

Authors :
Lu, Qin
Wang, Sheng-ming
Liu, Yi-xiao
Chen, Hong
Zhang, Rui
Zhang, Wen-hui
Zou, Yuan-yuan
Zhou, Jia-wei
Guo, Xin-yi
Zhang, Ying
Huang, Teng-Li
Liu, Yu-hang
Zhang, Si-qi
Yamanishi, Kyosuke
Yamanishi, Hiromichi
Higashino, Hideaki
Okamura, Haruki
Source :
Acta Pharmacologica Sinica; August 2019, Vol. 40 Issue: 8 p1119-1126, 8p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Successful prevention and treatment of hypertension depend on the appropriate combination of antihypertensive drug therapy and nondrug lifestyle modification. While most hypertension guidelines recommend moderate- to high-intensity exercise, we decided to explore a mild yet effective type of exercise to add to hypertension management, especially in populations with complications or frailty. After comparing the short-term cardiovascular effects of low-speed walking versus high-speed walking for 3 kilometers (km) (3 km/h versus 6 km/h) in young, healthy volunteers, we delivered low-speed walking (low-intensity walking, 2.5 metabolic equivalents of task, METs) as exercise therapy in 42 prehypertensive and 43 hypertensive subjects. We found that one session of 3 km low-intensity walking exerted a transient pressure-lowering effect as well as a mild negative chronotropic effect on heart rate in both the prehypertensive and hypertensive subjects; these short-term benefits on blood pressure and heart rate were accompanied by a brief increase in urine β-endorphin output. Then we prescribed regular low-intensity walking with a target exercise dose (exercise volume) of 500–1000 METs·min/week (50–60 min/day and 5–7 times/week) in hypertensive subjects in addition to their daily activities. Regular low-intensity walking also showed mild but significant blood pressure-lowering and heart rate-reducing effects in 7 hypertensive subjects within two months. It is hypothesized that regular low-intensity exercise of the necessary dose could be taken as a pragmatic and supplementary medication for hypertension management.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16714083 and 17457254
Volume :
40
Issue :
8
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Acta Pharmacologica Sinica
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs48473745
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41401-018-0202-8