Lower Your Blood Pressure With Exercise
Last reviewed and revised by Faculty of Harvard Medical
School on May 1, 2012
By Howard LeWine, M.D. Brigham and Women's Hospital
Regular exercise is a great way to prevent high blood pressure
or hypertension. But did you know it's also one of the best means of
lowering high blood pressure? It may even help you avoid having to take
medication to bring your numbers into the normal ranges.
Your blood pressure is determined by the force your heart
produces in your arteries when it pumps blood through your body and by the
tension of the artery walls. High blood pressure occurs when the blood pushes
against artery walls with too much pressure.
Persistently high blood pressure puts a strain on the arteries,
which can cause them to harden, become clogged or to weaken. This in turn
increases the risk of heart disease and stroke.
Here's how exercise can help. The cells lining our artery walls
contain chemicals that determine the degree of tension of the arteries. Exercise
training keeps these cells — called vascular endothelial cells — healthy.
Healthy endothelial cells release more chemical "relaxers" and inhibit the
production of chemical "tighteners." With less resistance in the arteries, your
heart can pump more efficiently and blood flows more easily.
There is no "best" way to exercise to help lower blood
pressure. The old "no-pain-no-gain" regimen of high-intensity activity aimed at
pushing the heart and lungs to their limits is long gone. In 1995, experts
unveiled a kinder, gentler approach: 30 minutes or more of moderate-intensity
activity done on most — but preferably all — days of the week.
Brisk walking and leaf-raking joined jogging and swimming as
acceptable activities. With this no-sweat version, you don't even have to be
active for 30 minutes straight. Segments of 10 to 15 minutes are fine. The
emphasis on moderate activity was aimed, in part, at getting people who wouldn’t
exercise to increase their daily physical activity.
Today, 30 minutes of moderate intensity exercise remains a good
start. But the new goal, set by the Institute of Medicine is to perform 60
minutes of more vigorous exercise to raise your heart rate to a moderate
intensity level.
In general, you should vary your daily workout with a
combination of cardiovascular (aerobics) and resistance training. Also you want
to stretch after each exercise session. To lower blood pressure, spend more time
on aerobics. Some resistance training is fine but don't strain. Do more
repetitions at lighter weights to prevent your blood pressure from temporarily
spiking up.
Since high blood pressure is a risk factor for heart disease
and stroke, you should ask your doctor for advice about an exercise routine that
is right for you. In general, if you don't have other risk factors for heart
disease and you don't take blood pressure medication, no special precautions are
necessary.
To insure that you stick with it, start slowly and gradually
work up to longer and more intense exercise sessions. If you do experience chest
pain, shortness of breath, dizziness or cold sweats, don't push through it.
Contact your doctor; he or she may want to order a stress test before giving you
the go-ahead to restart your program.
If you are taking one or more medications for high blood
pressure, you can still exercise but you need to check with your doctor first.
Depending upon the class of medication, you may need to take some extra
precautions:
Any increase in the amount of physical activity you do is a
step in the right direction. Burning more calories with shorts walks and
climbing the stairs can help maintain a healthy body weight. And losing weight,
even if you only increase your exercise a little, will help lower blood
pressure.
If you're already somewhat active, try adding more exercise to
your routine. Adding activities that burn an extra 100 calories per day can make
a difference. Increase that to 300 calories per day and the weight-loss benefits
really start to kick in.
Here are some examples of activities that will burn 300
calories per hour:
Howard LeWine, M.D. is chief editor of Internet publishing,
Harvard Health Publications. He is a clinical instructor of medicine at Harvard
Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital. Dr. LeWine has been a primary
care internist and teacher of internal medicine since 1978.
|
Stig Östlund
lördag, maj 19, 2012
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