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(Circulation. 1999;99:1831-1836.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Clinical Investigation and Reports |
From the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Framingham Heart Study, Framingham, Mass (J.P.S., M.G.L., J.C.E., C.J.O., D.L.); the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md (T.A.M., C.J.O., D.L.); the Division of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Mass (J.P.S., M.G.L., J.C.E., D.L.); the Department of Cardiology, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio (M.L.); and the Divisions of Cardiology and Clinical Epidemiology, Beth Israel Hospital (D.L.), and Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School (J.P.S., C.J.O), Boston.
Correspondence to Daniel Levy, MD, Framingham Heart Study, 5 Thurber St, Framingham, MA 01702. E-mail dan{at}fram.nhlbi.nih.gov
BackgroundAlthough systolic blood pressure (SBP) response to exercise has been shown to predict subsequent hypertension in small samples of men, this association has not been studied in a large population-based sample of middle-aged men and women. The purpose of this study was to examine, in normotensive subjects, the relations of SBP and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) during the exercise and recovery periods of a graded treadmill test to the risk of developing new-onset hypertension.
Methods and ResultsBP data from exercise testing in 1026 men and
1284 women (mean age, 42±10 years; range, 20 to 69 years) from the
Framingham Offspring Study who were normotensive at baseline were
related to the incidence of hypertension 8 years later. New-onset
hypertension, defined as an SBP
140 mm Hg or DBP
90
mm Hg or the initiation of antihypertensive drug treatment, occurred
in 228 men (22%) and 207 women (16%). Exaggerated SBP (Ex-SBP 2) and
DBP (Ex-DBP 2) response and delayed recovery of SBP (R-SBP 3) and DBP
(R-DBP 3) were defined as an age-adjusted BP greater than the 95th
percentile during the second stage of exercise and third minute of
recovery, respectively. After multivariable adjustment, Ex-DBP 2
was highly predictive of incident hypertension in both men (OR, 4.16;
95% CI, 2.15, 8.05) and women (OR, 2.17; CI, 1.19, 3.96). R-SBP 3 was
predictive of hypertension in men in a multivariable model that
included exercise duration and peak exercise BP (OR, 1.92; CI, 1.00,
3.69). Baseline resting SBP (
2, 23.4 in men and 34.7 in
women) and DBP (
2, 11.3 in men and 13.1 in women) had
stronger associations with new-onset hypertension than exercise DBP
(
2, 16.4 in men and 6.1 in women) and recovery SBP
(
2, 6.5 in men and 2.1 in women) responses.
ConclusionsAn exaggerated DBP response to exercise was predictive of risk for new-onset hypertension in normotensive men and women. An elevated recovery SBP was predictive of hypertension in men. These findings may reflect subtle pathophysiological features in the preclinical stage of hypertension.
Key Words: tests hypertension trials
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