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  • ARTERY 18, Guimaraes Oral Presentation abstracts
  • Oral Session II - Young Investigator Award
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2.7 Fitness Modifies the Association Between Exercise Blood Pressure and Left-Ventricular Mass in Adolescence

Abstract

Objective

Exaggerated exercise blood pressure (BP) is associated with higher left-ventricular mass index (LVMI). Paradoxically, exercise BP and LVMI may be higher with greater fitness, but underlying factors are poorly understood. This study aimed to determine the influence of fitness on exercise BP and its relationship with LVMI in adolescents.

Methods

4835 adolescents from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, aged 15.4(0.3) years, 49% male completed a submaximal cycle test. Exercise BP was measured immediately on test cessation and fitness calculated as physical work capacity 170 adjusted for lean body-mass. LVMI (n = 1589), cardiac output (CO, n = 1628) and total peripheral resistance (TPR, n = 1628) were measured by echocardiography 2.4 (0.4) years later.

Results

Each unit of fitness was associated with a 6.46 mmHg increase (95% CI: 5.83, 7.09) in exercise systolic BP. Exercise systolic BP increased step-wise by third of fitness (difference 6.06 mmHg, 95% CI:4.99, 7.13 first vs. middle; 11.13 mmHg, 10.05, 12.20 middle vs. highest). Each 5 mmHg increase in exercise systolic BP was associated with 0.25 g/m2. 7 (0.16–0.35) greater LVMI, attenuated with adjustment for fitness. There was evidence of an interaction between fitness and exercise BP on LVMI, more-marked in the middle fitness third (difference −0.27g/m2.7, −0.51,0.04 vs. first third), but similar in lowest and highest fitness thirds. CO increased (difference 0.06 L/min, −0.05,0.17; 0.23 L/min, 0.12,0.34), TPR decreased (difference −0.13AU, −0.84,0.59; −1.08AU, −0.1.80,−0.35 with fitness.

Conclusion

Fitness may modify associations between exercise BP and LVMI in adolescence. Higher CO, but lower TPR suggests a physiological exercise BP-LVMI relationship with higher fitness, rather than pathological elevations in exercise BP and LVMI.

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This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).

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Huang, Z., Fonseca, R., Sharman, J. et al. 2.7 Fitness Modifies the Association Between Exercise Blood Pressure and Left-Ventricular Mass in Adolescence. Artery Res 24, 71 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.artres.2018.10.030

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.artres.2018.10.030