Blood Pressure Circadian Pattern and Physical Exercise Assessment by Accelerometer and 7-Day Physical Activity Recall Scale
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Other authors
Publication date
2014ISSN
1879-1905
Abstract
The relationship between regular physical activity, measured objectively
and by self-report, and the circadian pattern of 24-hour ambulatory
arterial blood pressure (BP) has not been clarified.
We performed a cross-sectional study in a cohort of healthy patients.
We included 1,345 patients from the EVIDENT study (mean age
55 ± 14 years; 59.3% women). Physical activity was assessed using the
7-day physical activity recall (PAR) questionnaire (metabolic equivalents
(MET)/hour/week) and the Actigraph GT3X accelerometer (counts/
minute) for 7 days; ambulatory arterial BP was measured with a radial
tonometer (B-pro device).
The dipper-pattern patients showed a higher level of activity than nondipper
patients, as assessed by accelerometer and 7-day PAR. Physical
activity measures correlated positively with the percent drop in systolic
BP (SBP; ρ = 0.19 to 0.11; P < 0.01) and negatively with the systolic and
diastolic sleep to wake ratios (ρ = −0.10 to −0.18; P < 0.01) and heart
rate (ρ = −0.13; P < 0.01). In logistic regression, considering the circadian
pattern (1, dipper; 0, nondipper) as the dependent variable, the
odds ratio of the third tertile of counts/minute was 1.79 (95% confidence
interval [CI], 1.35–2.38; P < 0.01) and of MET/hour/week was 1.33
(95% CI, 1.01–1.75; P = 0.04) after adjustment for confounding variables.
Physical activity, as evaluated by both the accelerometer and the 7-day
PAR, was associated with a more marked nocturnal BP dip and, accordingly,
a lower SBP and diastolic BP sleep to wake ratio.
Document Type
Article
Language
English
Keywords
Exercici
Hipertensió
Pages
9 p.
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Citation
García-Ortiz, L., Recio-Rodríguez, J. I., Puig-Ribera, A., Lema-Bartolomé, J., Ibáñez-Jalón, E., González-Viejo, N., . . . Gomez-Marcos, M. A. (2014). Blood pressure circadian pattern and physical exercise assessment by accelerometer and 7-day physical activity recall scale. American Journal of Hypertension, 27(5), 665-673.
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