Ingrid Eitzen’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Illustration of the test protocol. BP, Blood pressure.
VO2max is presented as a box and whisker plot with median, interquartile range, and minimum and maximum value, otherwise Individual (dotted lines) and mean (red line) values for workload, percentage of maximal heart rate (%HR), blood lactate (BLa), systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) during the protocol. PRE = values at rest before the cycling, WU = values during warm-up, THR = values at the threshold, MAX = values at maximal intensity (except for BLa which was measured directly after the maximal intensity), POST = values measured 10 min after the test.
Physiological measurements during the experimental protocol, exemplified with data from one typical subject. PAT is inverted on the y-axis to better visualize the co-variation with SBP. PAT, pulse arrival time (ms); SBP, systolic blood pressure (mmHg); DBP, diastolic blood pressure (mmHg); HR, heart rate (beats per minute).
Mean values and standard deviation for workload, VO 2 , %VO 2 , HR, %HR, systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and blood lactate (BLa) during the protocol.
Overview of similar studies.
Blood Pressure Response and Pulse Arrival Time During Exercise Testing in Well-Trained Individuals
  • Article
  • Full-text available

July 2022

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275 Reads

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7 Citations

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Ingrid Eitzen

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Introduction: There is a lack of data describing the blood pressure response (BPR) in well-trained individuals. In addition, continuous bio-signal measurements are increasingly investigated to overcome the limitations of intermittent cuff-based BP measurements during exercise testing. Thus, the present study aimed to assess the BPR in well-trained individuals during a cycle ergometer test with a particular focus on the systolic BP (SBP) and to investigate pulse arrival time (PAT) as a continuous surrogate for SBP during exercise testing. Materials and Methods: Eighteen well-trained male cyclists were included (32.4 ± 9.4 years; maximal oxygen uptake 63 ± 10 ml/min/kg) and performed a stepwise lactate threshold test with 5-minute stages, followed by a continuous test to voluntary exhaustion with 1-min increments when cycling on an ergometer. BP was measured with a standard automated exercise BP cuff. PAT was measured continuously with a non-invasive physiological measurements device (IsenseU) and metabolic consumption was measured continuously during both tests. Results: At lactate threshold (281 ± 56 W) and maximal intensity test (403 ± 61 W), SBP increased from resting values of 136 ± 9 mmHg to maximal values of 219 ± 21 mmHg and 231 ± 18 mmHg, respectively. Linear within-participant regression lines between PAT and SBP showed a mean r ² of 0.81 ± 17. Conclusion: In the present study focusing on the BPR in well-trained individuals, we observed a more exaggerated systolic BPR than in comparable recent studies. Future research should follow up on these findings to clarify the clinical implications of the high BPR in well-trained individuals. In addition, PAT showed strong intra-individual associations, indicating potential use as a surrogate SBP measurement during exercise testing.

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Citations (1)


... During weight lifting, systolic BP as high as 480 mmHg has been recorded (5). During aerobic exercise, systolic BP can increase by around 40-60%, from normotensive to between 170 to 220 mmHg (9)(10)(11). In fact, although high systolic BP during and after exercise is associated with incident hypertension and increased cardiovascular risk (12)(13)(14), during maximum aerobic exercise, a low rather than a high peak systolic BP is associated with increased mortality (14). ...

Reference:

Home Blood Pressure in Health and Disease
Blood Pressure Response and Pulse Arrival Time During Exercise Testing in Well-Trained Individuals