Exaggerated blood pressure response to early stages of exercise stress testing and presence of hypertension
DESIGN: Cross-sectional study.
METHODS: 100 consecutive patients free from coronary artery disease (aged 56±9 years, 72% male) underwent clinically indicated exercise stress testing. Exercise BP was recorded at each stage of the Bruce protocol. Presence of hypertension was defined as 24-hour systolic BP ≥130mmHg or daytime systolic BP ≥135mmHg.
RESULTS: Exercise systolic BP at stage 1 and 2 of the test was significantly associated with the presence of hypertension (P <0.05), with the strongest association observed between stage 1 exercise systolic BP and 24-h systolic BP >130mmHg (AUC=0.752, 95% CI's 0.649-0.846, P <0.001). 79% of participants achieving systolic BP ≥150mmHg at stage 1 of the test were classified as having hypertension, with systolic BP >150mmHg predicting hypertension independently of age, sex and in-clinic hypertension status (OR=4.83, 95% CI's 1.62-14.39, P =0.005).
CONCLUSIONS: Irrespective of resting BP, systolic BP ≥150mmHg during early stages of the Bruce exercise stress test is associated with presence of hypertension. EEBP should be a warning signal to health/exercise professionals on the presence of hypertension and the need to provide follow up care to reduce cardiovascular risk.
History
Publication title
Journal of Science and Medicine in SportVolume
19Issue
12Pagination
1039-1042ISSN
1440-2440Department/School
Menzies Institute for Medical ResearchPublisher
Elsevier AustraliaPlace of publication
AustraliaRights statement
Copyright 2016 Sports Medicine AustraliaRepository Status
- Restricted