Peak Blood Pressure Responses During Maximum Cardiopulmonary Exercise TestingNovelty and Significance [Epidemiology/Population]

The objective of this study is to expand on previous efforts in establishing normative standards of exercising blood pressure (BP) at maximal physical exertion derived from treadmill cardiopulmonary exercise testing in the United States. Four experienced laboratories in the United States with established quality control procedures contributed data from September 1, 1986, to February 1, 2015. A total of 2917 maximal (peak respiratory exchange ratio ≥1.00) treadmill cardiopulmonary exercise testing responses from apparently healthy men and women (aged 20–79 years) without cardiovascular disease were submitted to FRIEND (Fitness Registry and the Importance of Exercise: A National Database). Percentiles of maximal systolic and diastolic BP were determined for each decade. Our results show a continued increase in peak systolic BP with age in both men and women to the sixth decade, followed by a plateau between the sixth and seventh decades. However, the trajectory of peak diastolic BP with age is different between men and women. Men showed an increase in peak systolic BP until the fifth decade, which plateaued by the seventh decade. In contrast, women showed a continued increase in peak diastolic BP across each decade. Existing reference data for exercising BP have not been updated for>20 years. Normative peak exercising BP values from FRIEND can be used to provide a more current representation of maximal BP during exercise testing in the US population.
Source: Hypertension - Category: Cardiology Authors: Tags: Aging, Exercise, Risk Factors, High Blood Pressure, Hypertension Original Articles Source Type: research