Moderate- to high-intensity strength training is recommended for healthy adults. In young subjects, a single session of strength training decreases blood pressure, while heart rate and cardiac work remain elevated afterwards. However, these effects have not been clearly demonstrated in elderly subjects. To investigate this issue, 16 elderly subjects each underwent a Control and an Exercise (3 sets, 8 RM, 9 exercises) session conducted in random order. Haemodynamic variables and heart rate variability were measured before and after the interventions. Systolic blood pressure did not change after the exercise session but did increase after the control session (+8.1±1.6 mm Hg, P≤0.05). Diastolic blood pressure, as well as systemic vascular resistance increased similarly after both sessions. Cardiac output and stroke volume decreased, while heart rate, rate-pressure product and the low- to high-frequency ratio of heart rate variability increased only after the exercise session ( - 0.5±0.1 L/min, - 9.3±2.0 ml,+3.8±1.6 bpm, +579.3±164.1 mmHg.bpm and +0.71±0.34, P≤0.05). Ambulatory blood pressure was similar after both sessions, while heart rate and rate pressure product remained higher after the exercise session for up to 4.5 h. After a single session of strength training, cardiac sympathetic modulation and heart rate remain elevated in elderly subjects, keeping cardiac work elevated for a long period of time.
The antihypertensive effect of amiodarone was investigated in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY). The SHR and WKY were treated with amiodarone (1 mg/mL PO) or tap water (control) for 20 weeks. The indirect arterial pressure (AP) was monitored weekly using the tail-cuff method. At the end of the 20th week, the direct AP was measured, and the systolic AP and pulse interval time series were submitted to autoregressive spectral analysis. In addition, cardiac baroreflex sensitivity and left ventricular weight were evaluated as well. The indirect AP was reduced 1 week after the beginning of amiodarone treatment. The direct mean AP and pulse interval were, respectively, 135+/-8 mm Hg and 191+/-3 ms in SHR treated with amiodarone (187+/-8 mm Hg and 156+/-7 ms in control SHR, P<0.05) and 87+/-3 mm Hg and 207+/-8 ms in WKY treated with amiodarone (105+/-8 mm Hg and 174+/-4 ms in control WKY, P<0.05). In SHR treated with amiodarone, the low-frequency oscillations of AP were lower (8.5+/-1.2 mm Hg(2) versus 14.4+/-2.9 mm Hg(2) in control SHR, P<0.05), whereas the reflex bradycardia was higher (0.84+/-0.12 ms/mm Hg versus 0.32+/-0.22 ms/mm Hg in control SHR, P<0.05). The left ventricle weight was also smaller in SHR treated with amiodarone (2.94+/-0.12 mg/g versus 3.45+/-0.24 mg/g in control SHR, P<0.05). In WKY, amiodarone induced similar changes as in SHR, except for a lack of effect in the left ventricle weight. These data indicate that amiodarone has an antihypertensive action in SHR that is associated with a reduction in vasomotor sympathetic modulation, an increase in vagal cardiac baroreflex sensitivity, and a decrease in cardiac hypertrophy.
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