Hypertension is the most prevalent cardiovascular disease risk factor among individuals 60 years of age and older. Hypertension can be prevented and modified with lifestyle interventions that include regular exercise. Water exercise is widely recommended for older adults for a variety of health benefits, but few studies have assessed the immediate ambulatory blood pressure (BP) response to water exercise, a response termed postexercise hypotension (PEH). We will assess PEH after a session of water aerobics in physically active, older women with hypertension. Twenty-four women will be randomly assign to participate in a 45 min session of moderate intensity, water aerobics (WATER) and a 45 min land control session (CONTROL). All experimental sessions will start at 9 am sharply with 7 days between them. Subjects will left the experiments wearing an ambulatory BP monitor for the next 21 hr.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
24
A continuous session of dynamic water aerobic exercise which consist of a dynamic warm-up period (5 minutes), an active exercise period (35 minutes), and a cooldown period (5 minutes) to total 45 minutes. Heart rate (HR) will be continuously measured with heart monitors (Polar) to confirm the intensity of the WATER session. The WATER intensity will be calculated according to the formula proposed by Kruel for exercise in an aquatic environment18 as follows: HR for exercise = % x (HRmax - ΔHR); % is the intensity of exercise; HRmax is the maximum HR (estimated by 220 - age); ΔHR represents the difference between resting HR on land and resting HR in the water environment. Exercise intensities: 55-60% HRmax during warm-up; 70-75% HRmax during active exercise; and 55-60% HRmax during cooldown.
Alexandre Lehnen
Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Blood pressure measurements
BP measurements will take and monitored using a 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) protocol according to standard procedures. BP monitoring devices (Spacelab, Redmond, WA, USA) will be used to obtain BP over 21 hours that consiste of four measurements per hour over awake period (10 am to 10 pm) and two measurements per hour over sleep period (10 pm to 6 am). For data analysis we will calculate hourly averages for awake and sleep (during the same periods as mentioned above), and over 21 hours. SBP and DBP data are presente in two different manners: readings per hour during the day and the night periods, and the BP response determined as the difference (delta) between each hourly BP measurement from baseline after WATER compared to CONTROL.
Time frame: 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring after water exercise
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