Reliability of non-invasive blood pressure measurement during heavy resistance exercise: A pilot study

K. Ipsen, C. Couppé, C. Neergaard, E. I. Prescott, S. P. Magnusson, C. H. Dall

Abstract

It is largely unknown how much heavy resistance exercise induces an acute increase in systolic blood pressure (SBP) and whether such increase can be measured in a reliable manner with non-invasive equipment. We aimed to investigate test-retest (day-to-day) reproducibility of acute SBP response during heavy resistance exercise using a non-invasive methodology (Nexfin), which provides continuous hemodynamics in real time. Blood pressure was measured in 10 lean, healthy men (mean age 38 years.) during 3 × 8 repetition maximum leg press machine performance on two different days 48 hours apart. Systematic differences in SBP between day 1 and day 2 were analyzed by paired t test. A correlation analysis using Pearson's product-moment determined the strength of the relationship of SBP between test days. No systematic bias between test days was found for SBP (day 1; 206 ± 19 vs day 2; 203 ± 20, P =.34). There was a significant correlation between measurements recorded SBP on test day 1 and day 2 (r =.88, P <.001). Limits of agreement were acceptable (upper 15.1 vs lower −21.0), and within-subject SBP variation was 3.2%. Findings suggest a non-invasive blood pressure device being reliable in measuring SBP pressure from day-to-day in lean, healthy men during heavy resistance exercise.

Original languageEnglish
JournalTranslational Sports Medicine
Volume1
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)89-94
ISSN2573-8488
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

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