Seven-day ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: blood pressure variability at rest and during exercise

Authors

SIEGELOVÁ Jarmila HAVELKOVÁ Alena DUŠEK Jiří POHANKA Michal DUNKLEROVÁ Leona DOBŠÁK Petr SINGH R. B. CORNELISSEN G.

Year of publication 2013
Type Article in Proceedings
Conference Noninvasive methods in cardiology 2013
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Web https://is.muni.cz/do/med/noninvasive_methods_in_cardiology/noninvasive-methods-in-cardiology-2013.pdf
Description Regular exercise increases life expectancy, quality of life and work capability and productivity. European Society of Cardiology, International College of Cardiology, American Heart Association Council on Clinical Cardiology and American College of Sports Medicine call on all population of the world to create a culture of physical activity and health for the prevention of cardiovascular diseases and diabetes mellitus (Singh RB and Indian Consensus Group, 2010, Singh RB et al., 2011, Singh RB et al., 2013). Usually there is no prescribed time of exercises. There is evidence that incidence of cardiovascular events peaks in the morning around 09:00 to 11:00 (Smolensky et al., 1972, Cornélissen et al., 1994). In one subject, based on 7-day C-ABPM, time of the evening exercise was associated with the presence of a circadian overswing (CHAT, abbreviation for Circadian Hyper-Amplitude Tension), not found when the same subject exercised in the morning (Homolka et al., 2005, Halberg et al., 2005, Cornélissen et al., 1994). A brief description of the subject results with exercise and circadian timing has been published (Singh et al., 2012).

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