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The effect of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on vascular function in adults with Long COVID

The effect of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on vascular function in adults with Long COVID
The effect of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on vascular function in adults with Long COVID
Acute prolonged sitting increases blood pressure (BP), and arterial stiffness (AS). Both of these may be mitigated via light physical activity (LPA). Whether Long COVID (LC), which partly manifests as vascular sequelae, predisposes a heightened sensitivity to sitting or diminished benefits from its interruption is unknown. The aims of this study were to identify whether individuals with LC: (i) exhibit a worse BP/AS response to uninterrupted sitting, and (ii) a diminished mitigation of BP/AS response to sitting interrupted with LPA, compared to healthy controls.
30 participants with LC and 15 controls completed two-hours of uninterrupted sitting and sitting interrupted with LPA. Central and peripheral systolic and diastolic BP and carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV) were determined pre and post sitting.
Linear mixed-effects models demonstrated no three-way or two-way interactions for any variable. There was a significant main effect of time, with increases in central systolic (MD=3.37 mmHg, SE=0.93mmHg, p <0.001) and central diastolic (MD=3.00mmHg, SE=0.58mmHg, p <0.001) BP. cfPWV was not altered in sitting in either group (MD=0.13m/s, SE =0.09m/s, p = 0.170). Uninterrupted sitting increases BP similarly, but AS is unchanged. Interrupting sitting with LPA did not mitigate sitting induced increase in BP regardless of LC diagnosis.
Hudson, Nick
37877b40-590d-42f6-8bb6-5c4e4c093d02
Scott, Hannah
44ee45c4-6259-4948-9d3b-60f0fc135137
Husted, Margaret
21af4875-9939-4653-a5c2-f210f2ccc4c7
Fryer, Simon
afeda96c-5446-4fb8-93c5-9986bda4e61c
Ryan-Stewart, Helen
76ced50b-4300-49dd-8437-fcd32b1a5fb1
Rickenbach, Mark
2ce3afb1-a434-43f6-802f-00a720c3a0e9
Stone, Keeron
f69d028c-a2e1-46b2-89b2-5555a435c131
Faulkner, James
b2bd38c9-667c-42e8-ad1e-6df58d1e3f7a
Hudson, Nick
37877b40-590d-42f6-8bb6-5c4e4c093d02
Scott, Hannah
44ee45c4-6259-4948-9d3b-60f0fc135137
Husted, Margaret
21af4875-9939-4653-a5c2-f210f2ccc4c7
Fryer, Simon
afeda96c-5446-4fb8-93c5-9986bda4e61c
Ryan-Stewart, Helen
76ced50b-4300-49dd-8437-fcd32b1a5fb1
Rickenbach, Mark
2ce3afb1-a434-43f6-802f-00a720c3a0e9
Stone, Keeron
f69d028c-a2e1-46b2-89b2-5555a435c131
Faulkner, James
b2bd38c9-667c-42e8-ad1e-6df58d1e3f7a

Hudson, Nick, Scott, Hannah, Husted, Margaret, Fryer, Simon, Ryan-Stewart, Helen, Rickenbach, Mark, Stone, Keeron and Faulkner, James (2025) The effect of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on vascular function in adults with Long COVID. Physiological Reports. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Acute prolonged sitting increases blood pressure (BP), and arterial stiffness (AS). Both of these may be mitigated via light physical activity (LPA). Whether Long COVID (LC), which partly manifests as vascular sequelae, predisposes a heightened sensitivity to sitting or diminished benefits from its interruption is unknown. The aims of this study were to identify whether individuals with LC: (i) exhibit a worse BP/AS response to uninterrupted sitting, and (ii) a diminished mitigation of BP/AS response to sitting interrupted with LPA, compared to healthy controls.
30 participants with LC and 15 controls completed two-hours of uninterrupted sitting and sitting interrupted with LPA. Central and peripheral systolic and diastolic BP and carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV) were determined pre and post sitting.
Linear mixed-effects models demonstrated no three-way or two-way interactions for any variable. There was a significant main effect of time, with increases in central systolic (MD=3.37 mmHg, SE=0.93mmHg, p <0.001) and central diastolic (MD=3.00mmHg, SE=0.58mmHg, p <0.001) BP. cfPWV was not altered in sitting in either group (MD=0.13m/s, SE =0.09m/s, p = 0.170). Uninterrupted sitting increases BP similarly, but AS is unchanged. Interrupting sitting with LPA did not mitigate sitting induced increase in BP regardless of LC diagnosis.

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Hudson Manuscript Clean Copy 20.05.25 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 May 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 503633
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503633
PURE UUID: b9ebc02b-c324-4d09-837b-c5be6d1397db
ORCID for James Faulkner: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3704-6737

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Date deposited: 07 Aug 2025 16:48
Last modified: 08 Aug 2025 02:13

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Contributors

Author: Nick Hudson
Author: Hannah Scott
Author: Margaret Husted
Author: Simon Fryer
Author: Helen Ryan-Stewart
Author: Mark Rickenbach
Author: Keeron Stone
Author: James Faulkner ORCID iD

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