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Background Exercise blood pressure (BP) is an important marker of left ventricular hypertrophy, incident hypertension and future cardiovascular events. Although impaired vascular function is hypothesized to influence the BP response during exercise, limited data exist on the association of vascular function with exercise BP in the community. Methods and Results Framingham Offspring cohort participants (n = 2115, 53% women, mean age 59 years) underwent a submaximal exercise test (first 2 stages of the Bruce protocol), applanation tonometry and brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD) testing. We related exercise systolic and diastolic BP at second stage of the Bruce protocol to standard cardiovascular risk factors and to vascular function measures. In multivariable linear regression models, exercise systolic BP was positively related to age, standing BP, standing heart rate, smoking, body mass index, and the total cholesterol-to-high-density cholesterol (HDL) ratio (P≤ 0.01 for all). Similar associations were observed for exercise diastolic BP. Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (P = 0.02), central pulse pressure (P<0.0001), mean arterial pressure (P = 0.04) and baseline brachial flow (P=0.002) were positively associated with exercise systolic BP, whereas FMD was negatively associated (P<0.001). For exercise diastolic BP, forward pressure wave amplitude was negatively related (P<0.0001) whereas mean arterial pressure was positively related (P<0.0001). Conslusions Increased arterial stiffness and impaired endothelial function are significant correlates of a higher exercise systolic BP response. Our findings suggest that impaired vascular function may contribute to exaggerated BP responses during daily living, resulting in repetitive increments in load on the heart and vessels and increased cardiovascular disease risk.
Background Exercise blood pressure (BP) is an important marker of left ventricular hypertrophy, incident hypertension and future cardiovascular events. Although impaired vascular function is hypothesized to influence the BP response during exercise, limited data exist on the association of vascular function with exercise BP in the community. Methods and Results Framingham Offspring cohort participants (n = 2115, 53% women, mean age 59 years) underwent a submaximal exercise exercise (first 2 stages of the Bruce protocol), applanation tonometry and brachial artery flow- mediated dilation (FMD We related exercise systolic and diastolic BP at second stage of the Bruce protocol to standard cardiovascular risk factors and to vascular function measures. In multivariable linear regression models, exercise systolic BP was positively related to age, standing BP, standing heart rate, smoking, body mass index, and the total cholesterol-to-high-density cholesterol (HDL) ratio (P ≦ 0.01 for al Similar associations were observed for exercise diastolic BP. Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (P = 0.02), central pulse pressure (P <0.0001), mean arterial pressure (P = 0.04) and baseline brachial flow were positive associated with exercise systolic BP, whereas FMD was negatively associated (P <0.001). For exercise diastolic BP, forward pressure wave amplitude was negatively related (P <0.0001) Increased arterial stiffness and impaired endothelial function are significant correlates of a higher exercise systolic BP response. Our findings suggest that impaired vascular function may contribute to exaggerated BP responses during daily living, resulting in repetitive increments in load on the heart and vessels and increased cardiovascular disease risk.