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Blood Pressure Variability: Relationship with Endothelial Health and Effects of an Exercise Training Intervention
Diaz, Keith M.
Diaz, Keith M.
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2012
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Kinesiology
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http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/1075
Abstract
Purpose: Evidence has accumulated to show that blood pressure variability (BPV) has a striking relationship with cardiovascular (CV) risk. Despite the mounting evidence implicating BPV as a CV risk factor, scant attention has been paid to: (1) the mechanisms by which high BPV confers greater CV risk; and (2) the efficacy of non-pharmacologic treatment modalities in the attenuation of BPV. In order to address these two unresolved questions, the purpose of this dissertation was twofold. The purpose of study #1 was to investigate the association between measures of short-term BPV (24-hour BPV) and long-term BPV (visit-to-visit BPV) with markers of endothelial health in a cohort of African Americans in order to determine if increased BPV may confer greater CV risk by eliciting injury to the endothelium. The purpose of study #2 was to investigate the effects of a 6-month aerobic exercise training (AEXT) intervention on visit-to-visit BPV and 24-hour BPV in the same cohort of African Americans in order to provide the first available data on the efficacy of a non-pharmacologic treatment modality in the lowering of BPV. Methods: We recruited 72 African Americans who were sedentary, non-diabetic, non-smoking, and free of CV and renal disease. Before and after a 6-month AEXT intervention, office blood pressure (BP) was measured at 3 separate visits and 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) was conducted to measure visit-to-visit BPV and 24-hour BPV, respectively. Right brachial artery diameter was assessed at rest, during flow-mediated dilation (FMD), and after nitroglycerin-mediated dilation (NMD). Peak and area under the curve (AUC) were calculated as measures of FMD and NMD, and the FMD/NMD ratio was calculated as a measure of endothelial function normalized by smooth muscle function. Fasted blood samples were obtained and were analyzed for circulating EMPs expressed as CD31+CD42- and CD62E+ EMPs. Results: In study #1, participants with higher 24-hour diastolic BPV (DBPV) had significantly lower CD31+CD42- EMPs compared to participants with lower 24-hour DBPV. When categorized according to visit-to-visit DBPV, participants with higher visit-to-visit DBPV had a significantly lower FMD/NMD ratio, and significantly higher %NMDpeak and NMDAUCs compared to participants with lower visit-to-visit DBPV. When analyzed as continuous variables, 24-hour mean arterial pressure variability (MAPV) was inversely associated with CD31+CD42- EMPs visit-to-visit DBPV was inversely associated with the FMD/NMD ratio and positively associated with %NMDpeak and NMDAUC; and 24-hour DBPV was positively associated with NMDAUC. All associations were independent of age, gender, BMI, mean BP, and pulse pressure. In study #2 investigating the effects of AEXT in 33 participants who completed the study, 24-hour DBPV and 24-hour MAPV were significantly increased after AEXT. The increase in 24-hour DBPV was independent of changes in BMI, mean BP, and self-reported sleep time. Heart rate variability (HRV) derived from ABPM was associated with the changes in 24-hour DBPV and 24-hour MAPV. There were no significant changes in visit-to-visit BPV after AEXT. Conclusions: The results from study #1 provide evidence that BPV is associated with vascular health as endothelial function was decreased in participants with high visit-to-visit DBPV, while smooth muscle function was increased in participants with higher visit-to-visit and 24-hour DBPV. The findings from study #2 show that 6-months of AEXT do not elicit beneficial changes in BPV. The finding of an association between changes in 24-hour BPV with HRV could indicate, however, that changes in activity levels during ABPM, in part, contributed to the observed changes in 24-hour BPV.
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