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Reliability of oscillometric central blood pressures responses to lower limb resistance exercise

Reliability of oscillometric central blood pressures responses to lower limb resistance exercise
Reliability of oscillometric central blood pressures responses to lower limb resistance exercise
Background and aims
Although it is well known that resistance training (RT) is beneficial for patients suffering from a variety of cardiovascular diseases, it remains underutilized as a rehabilitation tool as there is no reliable way to monitor the additional stress placed on the central organs. The current study aimed to determine between-day reliability of central haemodynamic indices using oscillometric pulse wave analysis (PWA) during progressive sub-maximal RT.
Methods
Nineteen healthy young males were tested on 3 different mornings in a fasted state. Central hemodynamic variables including augmentation index (AIx), AIx normalized to a heart rate of 75 beats per minute (AIx@75), central systolic blood pressure (cSBP), forwards (Pf) and backwards (Pb) wave reflection were determined at rest, as well as during leg extension RT at 10, 15 and 20% of maximal volitional contraction (MVC), and following 1 min and 5 min passive recovery.
Results
During RT at 10, 15 and 20% MVC, the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) values for AIx@75 (0.76–0.9), cSBP (0.74–0.78), Pf (0.75–0.82) and Pb (0.75–0.83) exceeded the criteria (0.75) for excellent reliability. During the 5 min recovery, the ICC values for AIx@75 (0.87–0.87), cSBP (0.69–0.7), Pf (0.63–0.67) and Pb (0.63–0.66) indicated good to excellent reliability.
Conclusions
Clinically meaningful changes in central hemodynamic indices can be obtained during resistance training using oscillometric PWA devices. This technology holds potential for advancing resistance training prescription guidelines for patients with overt cardiovascular diseases.
0021-9150
157-162
Fryer, Simon
c9e79f9f-d16b-44a9-926d-5e74f0af8934
Stone, Keeron
d2ca8269-7990-40cd-888d-01ad8c6cfdd1
Dickson, Tabitha
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Faulkner, James
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Lambrick, Danielle
1deafa4b-acf3-4eff-83c9-f8274e47e993
Corres, Pablo
b7391330-1d02-4da3-9d43-2da5fd482641
Jerred, Lauren
22ab3fe4-c7d2-410b-9afc-5501bacd4f98
Stoner, Lee
0f9dd581-205f-490d-8879-7ba7cfa51450
Fryer, Simon
c9e79f9f-d16b-44a9-926d-5e74f0af8934
Stone, Keeron
d2ca8269-7990-40cd-888d-01ad8c6cfdd1
Dickson, Tabitha
afafbda3-2a65-4330-a42b-4a69b39aaf6a
Faulkner, James
caa8b9e2-f286-4b3f-9017-3db3ffddd7d2
Lambrick, Danielle
1deafa4b-acf3-4eff-83c9-f8274e47e993
Corres, Pablo
b7391330-1d02-4da3-9d43-2da5fd482641
Jerred, Lauren
22ab3fe4-c7d2-410b-9afc-5501bacd4f98
Stoner, Lee
0f9dd581-205f-490d-8879-7ba7cfa51450

Fryer, Simon, Stone, Keeron, Dickson, Tabitha, Faulkner, James, Lambrick, Danielle, Corres, Pablo, Jerred, Lauren and Stoner, Lee (2018) Reliability of oscillometric central blood pressures responses to lower limb resistance exercise. Atherosclerosis, 268, 157-162. (doi:10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2017.11.031).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background and aims
Although it is well known that resistance training (RT) is beneficial for patients suffering from a variety of cardiovascular diseases, it remains underutilized as a rehabilitation tool as there is no reliable way to monitor the additional stress placed on the central organs. The current study aimed to determine between-day reliability of central haemodynamic indices using oscillometric pulse wave analysis (PWA) during progressive sub-maximal RT.
Methods
Nineteen healthy young males were tested on 3 different mornings in a fasted state. Central hemodynamic variables including augmentation index (AIx), AIx normalized to a heart rate of 75 beats per minute (AIx@75), central systolic blood pressure (cSBP), forwards (Pf) and backwards (Pb) wave reflection were determined at rest, as well as during leg extension RT at 10, 15 and 20% of maximal volitional contraction (MVC), and following 1 min and 5 min passive recovery.
Results
During RT at 10, 15 and 20% MVC, the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) values for AIx@75 (0.76–0.9), cSBP (0.74–0.78), Pf (0.75–0.82) and Pb (0.75–0.83) exceeded the criteria (0.75) for excellent reliability. During the 5 min recovery, the ICC values for AIx@75 (0.87–0.87), cSBP (0.69–0.7), Pf (0.63–0.67) and Pb (0.63–0.66) indicated good to excellent reliability.
Conclusions
Clinically meaningful changes in central hemodynamic indices can be obtained during resistance training using oscillometric PWA devices. This technology holds potential for advancing resistance training prescription guidelines for patients with overt cardiovascular diseases.

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Accepted/In Press date: 30 November 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 December 2017
Published date: January 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 417101
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/417101
ISSN: 0021-9150
PURE UUID: bc64a809-64b4-4d2b-9096-4310e1a61b4d
ORCID for Danielle Lambrick: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0325-6015

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Date deposited: 19 Jan 2018 17:30
Last modified: 13 Nov 2025 05:01

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Contributors

Author: Simon Fryer
Author: Keeron Stone
Author: Tabitha Dickson
Author: James Faulkner
Author: Pablo Corres
Author: Lauren Jerred
Author: Lee Stoner

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