Bond Vernon, Becknel Karissa, Kumar Krishna, Dorsey James, Gorantla Vasavi R, Volkova Yulia A, Millis Richard M
Department of Recreation, Human Performance & Leisure Studies and Exercise Science & Human Nutrition Laboratory, Howard University Cancer Center, Washington DC, USA.
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Howard University College of Pharmacy, Washington DC, USA.
Adv Prev Med. 2019 Feb 3;2019:5854219. doi: 10.1155/2019/5854219. eCollection 2019.
Obese African-American (AA) women are at high risk of hypertension (HT) and cardiovascular disease (CVD). Flow-mediated dilation (FMD) and arterial augmentation index (AI) are measures of endothelial function and arterial stiffness. Whether endothelial function and arterial stiffness predict risk of HT or CVD in obese African-American women with, versus without, parental histories of HT and whether aerobic exercise is an effective countermeasure remain unclear. The capacity for FMD is partly heritable. Therefore, we tested the hypotheses that less FMD and greater AI may be found in normotensive-obese, young-adult (18-26 year-old) AA women with hypertensive parents (n=10) than in a matched control group with normotensive parents (n=10) and that a single bout of aerobic exercise improves both endothelial function and arterial stiffness, with less improvement in the women with hypertensive parents. We studied each subject while at rest, 20 min before and 20 min after, 30 min of aerobic exercise. The exercise-induced changes and parental hypertension-related differences in AI were not significant. The exercise increased FMD in both of the groups with no significant difference in magnitude between the women with hypertensive and normotensive parents. FMD was significantly less in the women with hypertensive parents than in the women with normotensive parents after, but not before, the exercise (mean ±95% confidence interval of 11.3 ± 4.9% vs. 15.6 ± 4.9%, P=0.05). These findings suggest that a 30-min bout of aerobic exercise may improve FMD and unmask endothelial dysfunction in normotensive-obese, young-adult AA women with parental histories of HT. Future studies should determine whether regular aerobic exercise protects obese AA women from the endothelial dysfunction associated with diabetes and prevents CVD in this high-risk population.
肥胖的非裔美国(AA)女性患高血压(HT)和心血管疾病(CVD)的风险很高。血流介导的血管舒张(FMD)和动脉增强指数(AI)是内皮功能和动脉僵硬度的指标。在有或没有高血压家族史的肥胖非裔美国女性中,内皮功能和动脉僵硬度是否能预测HT或CVD的风险,以及有氧运动是否是一种有效的对策,目前尚不清楚。FMD的能力部分是可遗传的。因此,我们检验了以下假设:与有血压正常父母的匹配对照组(n = 10)相比,有高血压父母的血压正常的肥胖年轻成年(18 - 26岁)AA女性(n = 10)可能表现出更低的FMD和更高的AI,并且单次有氧运动可改善内皮功能和动脉僵硬度,有高血压父母的女性改善程度较小。我们在静息状态下、有氧运动前20分钟、有氧运动后20分钟以及有氧运动30分钟后对每位受试者进行了研究。运动引起的AI变化以及与父母高血压相关的差异并不显著。运动使两组的FMD均增加,有高血压父母的女性和血压正常父母的女性之间增加幅度无显著差异。运动后(而非运动前),有高血压父母的女性的FMD显著低于有血压正常父母的女性(平均值±95%置信区间为11.3±4.9%对15.6±4.9%,P = 0.05)。这些发现表明,30分钟的有氧运动可能会改善有高血压家族史的血压正常的肥胖年轻成年AA女性的FMD,并揭示其内皮功能障碍。未来的研究应确定规律的有氧运动是否能保护肥胖的AA女性免受与糖尿病相关的内皮功能障碍影响,并预防这一高危人群的CVD。