The effects of changes in physical activity on major cardiovascular risk factors, hemodynamics, sympathetic function, and glucose utilization in man: a controlled study of four levels of activity.
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 73 (1), 30-40
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.73.1.30
Abstract
The effects of four levels of activity on heart rate, blood pressure, cardiac index, total peripheral resistance index (TPRI), norepinephrine (NE) spillover rate, insulin sensitivity, and levels of lipids and some hormones were studied in 12 normal subjects. The randomized periods were (1) 4 weeks of below-sedentary activity, (2) 4 weeks of sedentary activity, (3) 4 weeks of 40 min of bicycling three times per week, and (4) 4 weeks of similar bicycling seven times per week. Exercise three times per week reduced resting blood pressure by 10/7 mm Hg (p less than .01) and it was reduced by 12/7 mm Hg after exercise seven times per week (both p less than .01). This was associated with reduction in TPRI, an increase in cardiac index, and cardiac slowing. At the highest level of activity, NE spillover rate, an index of sympathetic activity, fell to 35% of the sedentary value (p less than .001) in eight of 10 subjects. In two other subjects NE spillover rate rose, although blood pressure and TPRI were reduced. M...This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Training, diet and physical characteristics of distance runners with low or high concentrations of high density lipoprotein cholesterolAtherosclerosis, 1984
- Effect of physical exercise on blood lipids and adipose tissue composition in young healthy menAtherosclerosis, 1984
- Plasma noradrenaline kinetics in humansJournal of the Autonomic Nervous System, 1984
- Increased exercise level and plasma lipoprotein concentrations: A one-year, randomized, controlled study in sedentary, middle-aged menMetabolism, 1983
- Synergistic interaction between exercise and insulin on peripheral glucose uptake.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1981
- Studies on the sparing effect of exercise on insulin requirements in human subjectsMetabolism, 1981
- VIGOROUS EXERCISE IN LEISURE-TIME: PROTECTION AGAINST CORONARY HEART DISEASEThe Lancet, 1980
- Physical Conditioning Augments the Fibrinolytic Response to Venous Occlusion in Healthy AdultsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- Increased Insulin Receptors after Exercise in Patients with Insulin-Dependent Diabetes MellitusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AS AN INDEX OF HEART ATTACK RISK IN COLLEGE ALUMNI1American Journal of Epidemiology, 1978