11
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
1 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Group Means and Inter-Individual Analysis in Post-exercise Hypotension: Effects of Citrulline Malate Oral Supplementation

      editorial

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisherPMC
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Hypertension is pointed out as one of the most aggressive risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, since it is directly associated with nearly 8 million obits per year related to cardiovascular diseases such as cardiac arrest or stroke. 1 Hypertensives with low levels of physical activity present higher risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality even when receiving anti-hypertensive medication. 2 The regular practice of exercise, mainly aerobic exercises, is highly recommended due to its hypotensive effect. 3 Actually, a single session of exercise is already able to promote a sustained reduction of blood pressure, this phenomenon is called post-exercise hypotension (PEH). 4-6 Kenney and Seals 6 were the first to term the most accepted version of PEH as a phenomenon - It is the decrease of systolic and/or diastolic blood pressure after an acute session of exercise to below a control value followed by no clinical hypotensive symptom. PEH has been faced as a clinically relevant tool, mainly due to its known magnitude and for lasting many hours. 5 In this context, a meta-analysis including 65 studies recently showed reductions of blood pressure averaging from 6/4 mmHg for systolic/diastolic after aerobic exercise session, 7 while hour-to-hour analysis reported a decrease for 16 hours. 8 Despite established, PEH presents a large variation in magnitude and duration across the literature, which suggest that many factors of influence and different mechanisms are involved in promoting PEH. 4 Along this line, Casonatto et al. 9 suggested that citrulline malate oral supplementation might favor a greater PEH in middle-age treated hypertensives. For this, the authors supplemented the subjects with citrulline malate in a randomized double-blinded study controlled by placebo. The supplementation of citrulline malate increases arginine plasma levels, which favors the augment of nitric oxide through the cycle of citrulline-nitric oxide. 10 Thus, the authors suggest that greater levels of nitric oxide were responsible for a greater decrease in systemic vascular resistance and subsequently PEH. However, in healthy subjects, Halliwill et al. 11 did not observe any influence on blood pressure, calf and forearm vascular resistance post-exercise after inhibiting systemic nitric oxide synthase. It is also important to highlight that citrulline malate did not promote hypotensive effect stand-alone, which suggests a greater effect only when it is associated to exercise. Such results bring an open field for future studies to investigate how citrulline malate and aerobic exercise can together promote a greater PEH and the mechanisms behind it. Although reproducibility is good for PEH, 12 subjects present not uniform blood pressure responses post-exercise. Such pattern has encouraged researchers to explore individual analysis as an additional approach to show their data and not only the statistical difference for group means. 13,14 The authors of the study discussed in this Short Editorial also highlighted inter-individual analysis in which they categorized “responders” (i.e. who the blood pressure decrease post-exercise) and “non-responders” (i.e. who the blood pressure did not change or was increased post-exercise). This type of analysis allows even though is observed no mean differences, most of the subjects might present clinically relevant blood pressure decrease post-exercise, which occurred for some variables in the discussed study. However, it is not still totally settled which is the best approach to interpret inter-individual data, and researchers should be careful about assumptions and conclusions when introduce this analysis. The best strategy is still to be matched to define a “responder” and a “non-responder”, and the debate remains whether it needs to be based on changes clinically relevant or representing a measure defined by a mathematical approach. Concerning the magnitude of PEH to determine a clinically relevant change for PEH is also not still determined; a quite acceptable option might be employing the error of blood pressure measurement to be overcame by exercise reducing blood pressure below these values. 15 Nonetheless, few well-designed studies have adequately investigated the reproducibility of PEH to characterize a universal error measurement. Then, to calculate the error in each study would be the best approach, taking blood pressure measurements at rest in two different days considering the subjects and the same evaluator involved in the study. Thus, the results presented by Casonatto et al. 9 suggest a possible associated effect of citrulline malate oral supplementation in promoting greater PEH in hypertensives, and which mechanisms are involved in this response should be explored in the future. Another unsolved question was raised in this study; might oral supplementation with citrulline malate associated to aerobic exercise be a promising tool to promote other cardiovascular benefits, such as vascular function, in both, acute and chronic studies? Regarding analysis to report data, studies investigating group mean data demonstrated the clinical implications for PEH, but inter-individual analysis may be a step forward in the comprehension of this phenomenon. Then, to identify whether and what are the clinical meanings for “responders” and “non-responders”.

          Related collections

          Most cited references13

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: found
          Is Open Access

          A Statistical Framework to Interpret Individual Response to Intervention: Paving the Way for Personalized Nutrition and Exercise Prescription

          The concept of personalized nutrition and exercise prescription represents a topical and exciting progression for the discipline given the large inter-individual variability that exists in response to virtually all performance and health related interventions. Appropriate interpretation of intervention-based data from an individual or group of individuals requires practitioners and researchers to consider a range of concepts including the confounding influence of measurement error and biological variability. In addition, the means to quantify likely statistical and practical improvements are facilitated by concepts such as confidence intervals (CIs) and smallest worthwhile change (SWC). The purpose of this review is to provide accessible and applicable recommendations for practitioners and researchers that interpret, and report personalized data. To achieve this, the review is structured in three sections that progressively develop a statistical framework. Section 1 explores fundamental concepts related to measurement error and describes how typical error and CIs can be used to express uncertainty in baseline measurements. Section 2 builds upon these concepts and demonstrates how CIs can be combined with the concept of SWC to assess whether meaningful improvements occur post-intervention. Finally, section 3 introduces the concept of biological variability and discusses the subsequent challenges in identifying individual response and non-response to an intervention. Worked numerical examples and interactive Supplementary Material are incorporated to solidify concepts and assist with implementation in practice.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: found
            Is Open Access

            Acute Effects of Exercise on Blood Pressure: A Meta-Analytic Investigation

            Hypertension affects 25% of the world's population and is considered a risk factor for cardiovascular disorders and other diseases. The aim of this study was to examine the evidence regarding the acute effect of exercise on blood pressure (BP) using meta-analytic measures. Sixty-five studies were compared using effect sizes (ES), and heterogeneity and Z tests to determine whether the ES were different from zero. The mean corrected global ES for exercise conditions were -0.56 (-4.80 mmHg) for systolic BP (sBP) and -0.44 (-3.19 mmHg) for diastolic BP (dBP; z ≠ 0 for all; p < 0.05). The reduction in BP was significant regardless of the participant's initial BP level, gender, physical activity level, antihypertensive drug intake, type of BP measurement, time of day in which the BP was measured, type of exercise performed, and exercise training program (p < 0.05 for all). ANOVA tests revealed that BP reductions were greater if participants were males, not receiving antihypertensive medication, physically active, and if the exercise performed was jogging. A significant inverse correlation was found between age and BP ES, body mass index (BMI) and sBP ES, duration of the exercise's session and sBP ES, and between the number of sets performed in the resistance exercise program and sBP ES (p < 0.05). Regardless of the characteristics of the participants and exercise, there was a reduction in BP in the hours following an exercise session. However, the hypotensive effect was greater when the exercise was performed as a preventive strategy in those physically active and without antihypertensive medication.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              Effect of systemic nitric oxide synthase inhibition on postexercise hypotension in humans.

              An acute bout of aerobic exercise results in a reduced blood pressure that lasts several hours. Animal studies suggest this response is mediated by increased production of nitric oxide. We tested the extent to which systemic nitric oxide synthase inhibition [N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA)] can reverse the drop in blood pressure that occurs after exercise in humans. Eight healthy subjects underwent parallel experiments on 2 separate days. The order of the experiments was randomized between sham (60 min of seated upright rest) and exercise (60 min of upright cycling at 60% peak aerobic capacity). After both sham and exercise, subjects received, in sequence, systemic alpha-adrenergic blockade (phentolamine) and L-NMMA. Phentolamine was given first to isolate the contribution of nitric oxide to postexercise hypotension by preventing reflex changes in sympathetic tone that result from systemic nitric oxide synthase inhibition and to control for alterations in resting sympathetic activity after exercise. During each condition, systemic and regional hemodynamics were measured. Throughout the study, arterial pressure and vascular resistances remained lower postexercise vs. postsham despite nitric oxide synthase inhibition (e.g., mean arterial pressure after L-NMMA was 108.0+/-2.4 mmHg postsham vs. 102.1+/-3.3 mmHg postexercise; P<0.05). Thus it does not appear that postexercise hypotension is dependent on increased production of nitric oxide in humans.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Arq Bras Cardiol
                Arq. Bras. Cardiol
                abc
                Arquivos Brasileiros de Cardiologia
                Sociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia - SBC
                0066-782X
                1678-4170
                August 2019
                August 2019
                : 113
                : 2
                : 229-230
                Affiliations
                [1]Universidade de São Paulo - Escola de Educação Física e Esporte, São Paulo, SP - Brazil
                Author notes
                Mailing Address: Leandro Brito, Universidade de São Paulo - Escola de Educação Física e Esporte - Av. Prof. Mello Moraes, 65. Postal Code: 05508-030, Cidade Universitária, São Paulo, SP - Brazil. E-mail: leandrobrito@ 123456usp.br
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9902-7390
                Article
                10.5935/abc.20190152
                6777884
                31483018
                6f5e90f2-f23d-42df-ba6b-b2a76f89bcb6

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                Categories
                Short Editorial

                cardiovascular diseases,blood pressure,hypertension,mortality & morbidity,exercise,post-exercise hypotension,citrulline

                Comments

                Comment on this article