People who keep fit face lesser chance of developing hypertension, says a new research.
Senior author of the study and cardiologist Mouaz H. Al-Mallah, M.D. said that increasing exercise and fitness levels probably protects against many diseases.
More than 57,000 participants in the Henry Ford Exercise Testing Project (The FIT Project) in 1991-2009 were referred for a treadmill stress test because they experienced chest pain or shortness of breath or to rule out ischemia.
Researchers measured the participants' physical fitness by calculating how much energy they burned in metabolic equivalents (METs), an estimate of the amount of oxygen the body uses per kilogram of body weight per minute. One MET is the amount of energy expended at rest; anything above that represents a level of exertion. High-intensity workouts translate to more METs.
At the beginning of the study, 35,175 participants had a history of high blood pressure.
Researchers found:
Those whose maximal exercise output was less than six METs had an over 70 percent chance of having high blood pressure at baseline compared to less than 50 percent for those with METs of greater than or equal to 12.
Those who reached 12 METs or more during the stress test had a 20 percent lower risk of developing hypertension compared to those reaching < 6 METs.
Of the 8,053 new cases of hypertension diagnosed during the study, 49 percent were in the lower fitness (less than six METs) group and 21 percent were in the higher fitness group (more than 12 METs).
There was a relationship between fitness and hypertension regardless of age, gender, race, obesity, resting blood pressure, or diabetes.
Further study was needed to determine how increasing and decreasing fitness levels impact hypertension risk over time, said Al-Mallah, who is also an associate professor of medicine at Wayne State University and head of cardiac imaging at King Abdulaziz Cardiac Center in Saudi Arabia.
The findings are published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
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