Six months of unsupervised exercise training lowers blood pressure during moderate, but not vigorous, aerobic exercise in adults with well-healed burn injuries.
Joseph Charles WatsoSteven A RomeroGilberto MoralezMu HuangMatthew N CramerElias JohnsonCraig Gerald CrandallPublished in: Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985) (2022)
Exercise training reduces cardiovascular disease risk, partly due to arterial blood pressure (BP) lowering at rest and during fixed-load exercise. However, it is unclear whether exercise training can reduce BP at rest and during exercise in adults with well-healed burn injuries. Therefore, the purpose of this investigation was to test the hypothesis that 6 mo of unsupervised exercise training reduces BP at rest and during lower-body cycle ergometry in adults with well-healed burn injuries. Thirty-nine adults (28 with well-healed burn injuries and 11 controls) completed 6 mo of unsupervised, progressive exercise training including endurance, resistance, and high-intensity interval components. Before and after exercise training, we measured BP at rest, during fixed-load submaximal exercise (50 and 75 W), during fixed-intensity submaximal exercise (40% and 70% of V̇o 2peak ), and during maximal exercise on a lower-body cycle ergometer. We compared cardiovascular variables using two-way ANOVA (group × pre/postexercise training [repeated factor]). Adults with well-healed burn injuries had higher diastolic BP at rest ( P = 0.04), which was unchanged by exercise training ( P = 0.26). Exercise training reduced systolic, mean, and diastolic BP during fixed-load cycling exercise at 75 W in adults with well-healed burn injuries ( P ≤ 0.03 for all), but not controls ( P ≥ 0.67 for all). Exercise training also reduced mean and diastolic BP during exercise at 40% ( P ≤ 0.02 for both), but not at 70% ( P ≥ 0.18 for both), of V̇o 2peak . These data suggest that a 6-mo unsupervised exercise training program lowers BP during moderate, but not vigorous, aerobic exercise in adults with well-healed burn injuries. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Adults with well-healed burn injuries have greater cardiovascular disease morbidity and all-cause mortality compared with nonburn-injured adults. We found that exercise training reduced blood pressure (BP) during fixed-load cycling at 75 W and during moderate, but not vigorous, intensity cycling exercise in adults with well-healed burn injuries. These data suggest that 6 mo of unsupervised exercise training provides some degree of cardioprotection by reducing BP responses during submaximal exercise in well-healed burn-injured adults.