View clinical trials related to Systolic Essential Hypertension.
Filter by:The previous studies used the slow loaded breathing device for breathing training (Jones et al., 2010). It has been shown that slow loaded breathing training can reduce resting blood pressure and heart rate in essential hypertensive patients. However, this has not been studied in elderly with essential isolated systolic hypertensive patients. Not only highest prevalence of hypertension in Thailand was found in elderly but also physiological changes in the elderly are cause of interest in this special population. It has many advantages to use a slow loaded breathing training in elderly people. Firstly, it is low technology and easily implemented at home. Secondly, it can be practiced almost anytime and anywhere. Thirdly, the orthopedic complications of slow loaded breathing training are minimal. Finally, slow loaded breathing training may be enhancing cardiopulmonary function and other fitness traits, but it out of scope of this study. Moreover, slow loaded breathing exercise by itself should not result in any metabolic adaptation of skeletal muscles, such as the forearm, which had not been trained. If slow loaded breathing training modified some central component of the pressor reflex pathway in a way that single muscle training might work, as suggested above, then loaded breathing training would have a modulating effect on the pressor responses of muscles that had not been trained. We, therefore, aim to study the effect of slow loaded breathing training by using Breathmax on blood pressure at rest and exercise in elderly with essential isolated systolic hypertension and also investigate the autonomic function and others that may be involved with the changed blood pressure in elderly with essential isolated systolic hypertension. We hypothesized that slow loaded and unloaded breathing training could reduce resting and exercising blood pressure in elderly with essential isolated systolic hypertension.