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Cardiopulmonary deconditioning and plasma volume loss are not sufficient to provoke orthostatic hypertension.

J-N HoenemannS MoestlL de BoniF HoffmannM ArzL BergerD PestaK HeusserE MulderS M C LeeB R MaciasJ TankJ Jordan
Published in: Hypertension research : official journal of the Japanese Society of Hypertension (2024)
Orthostatic hypertension, defined by an increase of systolic blood pressure (SBP) of ≥20 mmHg upon standing, harbors an increased cardiovascular risk. We pooled data from two rigorously conducted head-down tilt bedrest studies to test the hypothesis that cardiopulmonary deconditioning and hypovolemia predispose to orthostatic hypertension. With bedrest, peak VO 2 decreased by 6 ± 4 mlO 2 /min/kg (p < 0.0001) and plasma volume by 367 ± 348 ml (p < 0.0001). Supine SBP increased from 127 ± 9 mmHg before to 133 ± 10 mmHg after bedrest (p < 0.0001). In participants with stable hemodynamics following head-up tilt, the incidence of orthostatic hypertension was 2 out of 67 participants before bedrest and 2 out of 57 after bedrest. We conclude that in most healthy persons, cardiovascular deconditioning and volume loss associated with long-term bedrest are not sufficient to cause orthostatic hypertension.
Keyphrases
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