Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Archive for the ‘Blood Pressure’ Category

Blood Pressure and Heart Size in Athletes

In 1976, 413 high school runners in Finland competed in a 2000-meter race. At the time of the race and in a follow-up study twenty-five years later, the faster runners had much lower blood pressures than the slower ones (International Journal of Sports Medicine, July-August 2005.)

The researchers wanted to know whether a maximal durableness test to portion aerobic fitness in adolescence would predict hypertension in adults. This is the first study to show that faster teen age runners have lower blood pressures and that the lower blood pressures persist long after they stop running. In their teens, the faster runners were more fit than the slower runners, and their dedication may have persisted into later life; or the faster teen-age runners may have had some physiological advantage that kept their blood pressure lower and made them less likely to suffer heart attacks in later life. whether the faster runners were genetically first-rate to the slower runners, or something in their lifestyles made them faster as teenagers and also caused them to have lower blood pressures throughout their lives. whether way, the findings of this study should encourage early participation in sports and lifelong rehearsal habits.

Blood Pressure

Sometimes doctors mistake a large, strong salutary heart caused by vigorous rehearsal with the large, weak, sick heart of cardiomyopathy. A description from University College London Hospitals describes the case of a professional athlete who was prohibited from playing football because doctors didn’t order the right tests (European Journal of Echocardiology, August 2005).

In cardiomyopathy, the enlargement is caused by the heart’s inability to pump blood through the body at rest because of poor pumping power and inability to fill adequately with blood. A someone with this health can die during exercise. On the other hand, habitancy who rehearsal vigorously over many years can organize a very large muscular heart which is stronger than general and far less likely to suffer any disease. If this outpatient had an echocardiogram and treadmill rehearsal tests read by a physician experienced with athletes, he would not have been diagnosed with cardiomyopathy.

Blood Pressure and Heart Size in Athletes