Clinical and Experimental Hypertension (Nov 2020)

Effects of ACEi and ARB on post-exercise hypotension induced by exercises conducted at different times of day in hypertensive men

  • Leandro C. Brito,
  • Luan Azevêdo,
  • Tiago Peçanha,
  • Rafael Yokoyama Fecchio,
  • Rafael Andrade Rezende,
  • Giovânio Vieira da Silva,
  • Andrea Pio-Abreu,
  • Décio Mion,
  • John R. Halliwill,
  • Claudia L. M. Forjaz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/10641963.2020.1783546
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 8
pp. 722 – 727

Abstract

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Background Post-exercise hypotension (PEH) is greater after evening than morning exercise, but antihypertensive drugs may affect the evening potentiation of PEH. Objective: To compare morning and evening PEH in hypertensives receiving angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) or angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARB). Methods Hypertensive men receiving ACEi (n = 14) or ARB (n = 15) underwent, in a random order, two maximal exercise tests (cycle ergometer, 15 watts/min until exhaustion) with one conducted in the morning (7 and 9 a.m.) and the other in the evening (8 and 10 p.m.). Auscultatory blood pressure (BP) was assessed in triplicate before and 30 min after the exercises. Changes in BP (post-exercise – pre-exercise) were compared between the groups and the sessions using a two-way mixed ANOVA and considering P < .05 as significant. Results In the ARB group, systolic BP decrease was greater after the evening than the morning exercise, while in the ACEi group, it was not different after the exercises conducted at the different times of the day. Additionally, after the evening exercise, systolic BP decrease was lower in the ACEi than the ARB group (ARB = −11 ± 8 vs −6 ± 6 and ACEi = −6 ± 7 vs. −8 ± 5 mmHg, evening vs. morning, respectively, P for interaction = 0.014). Conclusions ACEi, but not ARB use, blunts the greater PEH that occurs after exercise conducted in the evening than in the morning.

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