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. 1989 Dec;9(6):517-24.
doi: 10.1111/j.1475-097x.1989.tb01005.x.

Arm and ankle blood pressure response to treadmill exercise in normal people

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Arm and ankle blood pressure response to treadmill exercise in normal people

J Engvall et al. Clin Physiol. 1989 Dec.

Abstract

Nineteen healthy volunteers, 10 men and nine women (mean age 38 and 30 years), exercised on a treadmill. The systolic blood pressure (BP) was measured at the ankle and in the arm after submaximal (8 min with a final load of 2 W kg-1 body weight) and maximal exercise. The BP was measured for 10 min after exercise, or until the elimination of a negative pressure difference between ankle and arm. The pre-study resting systolic arm and ankle pressures were 122 +/- 11 and 144 +/- 13 mmHg. One minute after submaximal exercise, arm and ankle BP were 147 +/- 18 and 159 +/- 19 mmHg (ankle-arm pressure difference 12 +/- 13 mmHg); 1 min after maximal exercise the corresponding figures were 182 +/- 26 and 153 +/- 35 mmHg (ankle-arm pressure difference -29 +/- 33 mmHg). We conclude that maximal exercise, but not an appropriately chosen submaximal exercise level, causes a negative BP difference between ankle and arm in normal people.

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