Characterizing the interindividual postexercise hypotension response for two order groups of concurrent training in patients with morbid obesity
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
Exercise Concurrent training Endurance training Obesity Morbid obesity Nonresponders Blood pressure Metabolic syndrome
Fecha
2022-10-10Referencia bibliográfica
Álvarez C... [et al.] (2022), Characterizing the interindividual postexercise hypotension response for two order groups of concurrent training in patients with morbid obesity. Front. Physiol. 13:913645. doi: [10.3389/fphys.2022.913645]
Patrocinador
University de La Frontera, Chile Project DI21-0030 FRO 1895; programme "Recualificacion del Profesorado Universitario. Modalidad Maria Zambrano", Universidad de Granada/Ministerio de Universidades y Fondos Next Generation de la Union Europea; Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPQ) 303399/2018-0Resumen
Background: Postexercise hypotension (PEH) is a common physiological
phenomenon occurring immediately after endurance training (ET), resistance
training (RT), and ET plus RT, also termed concurrent training (CT); however,
there is little knowledge about the interindividual and magnitude response of
PEH in morbidly obese patients.
Aim: The aims of this study were (1) to investigate the effect of CT order (ET + RT
vs. RT + ET) on the blood pressure responses; 2) characterize these responses in
responders and nonresponders, and 3) identify potential baseline outcomes for
predicting blood pressure decreases as responders.
Methods: A quasi-experimental study developed in sedentary morbidly obese
men and women (age 43.6 ± 11.3 years; body mass index [BMI] ≥40 kg/m2) was
assigned to a CT group of ET plus RT (ET + RT; n = 19; BMI 47.8 ± 16.7) or RT plus
ET order group (RT + ET; n = 17; BMI 43.0 ± 8.0). Subjects of both groups received eight exercise sessions over four weeks. Primary outcomes include
systolic (SBP), diastolic (DBP), mean arterial pressure [MAP], heart rate at rest
[HR], and pulse pressure [PP] measurements before and after 10 min postexercise.
Secondary outcomes were other anthropometric, body composition,
metabolic, and physical fitness parameters. Using the delta ΔSBP reduction,
quartile categorization (Q) in “high” (Rs: quartile 4), “moderate” (MRs: quartile 3),
“low” (LRs: quartile 2), and “nonresponders” (NRs: quartile 1) was reported.
Results: Significant pre–post changes were observed in ET + RT in session 2 for
SBP (131.6 vs. 123.4 mmHg, p = 0.050) and session 4 (131.1 vs. 125.2 mmHg, p =
0.0002), while the RT + ET group showed significant reductions in session 4
(134.2 vs. 125.3 mmHg, p < 0.001). No significant differences were detected in
the sum of the eight sessions for SBP ( ΔSBP) between ET + RT vs. RT + ET
(−5.7 vs. −4.3 mmHg, p = 0.552). Interindividual analyses revealed significant
differences among frequencies comparing Q1 “NRs” (n = 8; 22.2%), Q2 “LRs”
(n = 8; 22.2%), Q3 “MRs” (n = 9; 25.0%), and Q4 “HRs” (n = 11; 30.5%), p < 0.0001.
Quartile comparisons showed significant differences in SBP changes (p =
0.035). Linear regression analyses revealed significant association between
ΔSBP with body fat % (β –3.826, R2 0.211 [21.1%], p = 0.031), skeletal
muscle mass [β –2.150, R2 0.125 (12.5%), p = 0.023], fasting glucose [β 1.273,
R2 0.078 (7.8%), p = 0.003], triglycerides [β 0.210, R2 0.014 (1.4%), p = 0.008], and
the 6-min walking test [β 0.183, R2 0.038 (3.8%), p = 0.044].
Conclusion: The CT order of ET + RT and RT + ET promote a similar ‘magnitude’
in the postexercise hypotensive effects during the eight sessions of both CT
orders in 4 weeks of training duration, revealing “nonresponders” and ‘high’
responders that can be predicted from body composition, metabolic, and
physical fitness outcomes.





