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The effects of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on blood pressure and arterial stiffness in patients with established coronary heart disease

The effects of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on blood pressure and arterial stiffness in patients with established coronary heart disease
The effects of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on blood pressure and arterial stiffness in patients with established coronary heart disease
Sedentary behaviour is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease. In healthy adults, prolonged uninterrupted sitting acutely increases blood pressure (BP) and aortic stiffness; however, these effects can be mitigated with light physical activity interruptions. Whether such mitigation strategies are effective in at-risk populations remains unclear. This study examined the effects of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on BP and arterial stiffness, measured by carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV), and femoral-ankle PWV in patients with established coronary heart disease (CHD). Using a randomised cross-over design, 14 CHD patients sat for 2 h uninterrupted (control [CON]), and 2 h interrupted with light physical activity (sit-to-stand, calf raises and walking) breaks every 30 min (ACT). Brachial BP and cfPWV were assessed immediately pre- and post-sitting. Time-by-condition effects were tested using linear mixed effects models with baseline adjustments. A significant time × condition interaction effect was detected for systolic BP (P = 0.037) with an increase in CON (mean difference [MD] = 15 mmHg [95% CI: 8, 23], P < 0.001) but not ACT (MD = 4 mmHg [95% CI: −4, 11], P = 0.334). A significant time effect was detected for cfPWV, with an increase across both CON and ACT conditions (MD = 0.76 m/s [95% CI: 0.52, 0.99], P < 0.001). For CHD patients, light activity breaks every 30 min can attenuate the impact of prolonged sitting on BP but not arterial stiffness; higher frequency or intensity of activity breaks may be required for better preservation of cardiovascular function.
cardiac rehabilitation, cardiovascular disease, endothelial function, heart disease, lifestyle behaviours, prolonged sitting
0958-0670
Fryer, Simon
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Scarle, Eve
5d7dc1da-f808-4c14-b36a-30686657369d
Turner, Louise
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Moinuddin, Arsalan
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Faulkner, James
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Legg, Hayley
a5ba28de-c044-418f-844d-72f034a00082
Paterson, Craig
d99fd440-78bc-4cf7-8564-244442a91d1e
Stone, Keeron
f69d028c-a2e1-46b2-89b2-5555a435c131
Fryer, Simon
afeda96c-5446-4fb8-93c5-9986bda4e61c
Scarle, Eve
5d7dc1da-f808-4c14-b36a-30686657369d
Turner, Louise
7a1fb8d6-437a-4c92-97b0-a5cbdff5db2b
Moinuddin, Arsalan
52cc78dc-0841-4c24-93b4-10a182d2bd8d
Faulkner, James
b2bd38c9-667c-42e8-ad1e-6df58d1e3f7a
Legg, Hayley
a5ba28de-c044-418f-844d-72f034a00082
Paterson, Craig
d99fd440-78bc-4cf7-8564-244442a91d1e
Stone, Keeron
f69d028c-a2e1-46b2-89b2-5555a435c131

Fryer, Simon, Scarle, Eve, Turner, Louise, Moinuddin, Arsalan, Faulkner, James, Legg, Hayley, Paterson, Craig and Stone, Keeron (2026) The effects of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on blood pressure and arterial stiffness in patients with established coronary heart disease. Experimental Physiology. (doi:10.1113/EP093399).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Sedentary behaviour is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease. In healthy adults, prolonged uninterrupted sitting acutely increases blood pressure (BP) and aortic stiffness; however, these effects can be mitigated with light physical activity interruptions. Whether such mitigation strategies are effective in at-risk populations remains unclear. This study examined the effects of uninterrupted and interrupted sitting on BP and arterial stiffness, measured by carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV), and femoral-ankle PWV in patients with established coronary heart disease (CHD). Using a randomised cross-over design, 14 CHD patients sat for 2 h uninterrupted (control [CON]), and 2 h interrupted with light physical activity (sit-to-stand, calf raises and walking) breaks every 30 min (ACT). Brachial BP and cfPWV were assessed immediately pre- and post-sitting. Time-by-condition effects were tested using linear mixed effects models with baseline adjustments. A significant time × condition interaction effect was detected for systolic BP (P = 0.037) with an increase in CON (mean difference [MD] = 15 mmHg [95% CI: 8, 23], P < 0.001) but not ACT (MD = 4 mmHg [95% CI: −4, 11], P = 0.334). A significant time effect was detected for cfPWV, with an increase across both CON and ACT conditions (MD = 0.76 m/s [95% CI: 0.52, 0.99], P < 0.001). For CHD patients, light activity breaks every 30 min can attenuate the impact of prolonged sitting on BP but not arterial stiffness; higher frequency or intensity of activity breaks may be required for better preservation of cardiovascular function.

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Accepted/In Press date: 9 March 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 March 2026
Keywords: cardiac rehabilitation, cardiovascular disease, endothelial function, heart disease, lifestyle behaviours, prolonged sitting

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 510856
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510856
ISSN: 0958-0670
PURE UUID: d296d714-bf0b-4005-932e-c46ccc905997
ORCID for James Faulkner: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3704-6737

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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2026 17:02
Last modified: 25 Apr 2026 04:03

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Contributors

Author: Simon Fryer
Author: Eve Scarle
Author: Louise Turner
Author: Arsalan Moinuddin
Author: James Faulkner ORCID iD
Author: Hayley Legg
Author: Craig Paterson
Author: Keeron Stone

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