Department of Nursing, Tzu Chi University of Science and Technology, Hualien City, Hualien County, Taiwan.
School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Feb 24;2(2):CD008823. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008823.pub2.
Increased physical activity has been recommended as an important lifestyle modification for the prevention and control of hypertension. Walking is a low-cost form of physical activity and one which most people can do. Studies testing the effect of walking on blood pressure have revealed inconsistent findings.
To determine the effect of walking as a physical activity intervention on blood pressure and heart rate.
We searched the following databases up to March 2020: the Cochrane Hypertension Specialised Register, CENTRAL (2020, Issue 2), Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO, SPORTDiscus, PEDro, the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, and ClinicalTrials.gov. We also searched the following Chinese databases up to May 2020: Index to Taiwan Periodical Literature System; National Digital Library of Theses and Dissertation in Taiwan; China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) Journals, Theses & Dissertations; and Wanfang Medical Online. We contacted authors of relevant papers regarding further published and unpublished work. The searches had no language restrictions.
Randomised controlled trials of participants, aged 16 years and over, which evaluated the effects of a walking intervention compared to non-intervention control on blood pressure and heart rate were included.
We used standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. Where data were not available in the published reports, we contacted authors. Pooled results for blood pressure and heart rate were presented as mean differences (MDs) between groups with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). We undertook subgroup analyses for age and sex. We undertook sensitivity analyses to assess the effect of sample size on our findings.
A total of 73 trials met our inclusion criteria. These 73 trials included 5763 participants and were undertaken in 22 countries. Participants were aged from 16 to 84 years and there were approximately 1.5 times as many females as males. The characteristics of walking interventions in the included studies were as follows: the majority of walking interventions was at home/community (n = 50) but supervised (n = 36 out of 47 reported the information of supervision); the average intervention length was 15 weeks, average walking time per week was 153 minutes and the majority of walking intensity was moderate. Many studies were at risk of selection bias and performance bias. Primary outcome We found moderate-certainty evidence suggesting that walking reduces systolic blood pressure (SBP) (MD -4.11 mmHg, 95% CI -5.22 to -3.01; 73 studies, n = 5060). We found moderate-certainty evidence suggesting that walking reduces SBP in participants aged 40 years and under (MD -4.41 mmHg, 95% CI -6.17 to -2.65; 14 studies, n = 491), and low-certainty evidence that walking reduces SBP in participants aged 41 to 60 years (MD -3.79 mmHg, 95% CI -5.64 to -1.94, P < 0.001; 35 studies, n = 1959), and those aged 60 years of over (MD -4.30 mmHg, 95% CI -6.17 to -2.44, 24 studies, n = 2610). We also found low certainty-evidence suggesting that walking reduces SBP in both females (MD -5.65 mmHg, 95% CI -7.89 to -3.41; 22 studies, n = 1149) and males (MD -4.64 mmHg, 95% CI -8.69 to -0.59; 6 studies, n = 203). Secondary outcomes We found low-certainty evidence suggesting that walking reduces diastolic blood pressure (DBP) (MD -1.79 mmHg, 95% CI -2.51 to -1.07; 69 studies, n = 4711) and heart rate (MD -2.76 beats per minute (bpm), 95% CI -4.57 to -0.95; 26 studies, n = 1747). We found moderate-certainty evidence suggesting that walking reduces DBP for participants aged 40 years and under (MD -3.01 mmHg, 95% CI -4.44 to -1.58; 14 studies, n = 491) and low-certainty evidence suggesting that walking reduces DBP for participants aged 41 to 60 years (MD -1.74 mmHg, 95% CI -2.95 to -0.52; 32 studies, n = 1730) and those aged 60 years and over (MD -1.33 mmHg, 95% CI -2.40 to -0.26; 23 studies, n = 2490). We found moderate-certainty evidence that suggests walking reduces DBP for males (MD -2.54 mmHg, 95% CI -4.84 to -0.24; 6 studies, n = 203) and low-certainty evidence that walking reduces DBP for females (MD -2.69 mmHg, 95% CI -4.16 to -1.23; 20 studies, n = 1000). Only 21 included studies reported adverse events. Of these 21 studies, 16 reported no adverse events, the remaining five studies reported eight adverse events, with knee injury being reported five times.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Moderate-certainty evidence suggests that walking probably reduces SBP. Moderate- or low-certainty evidence suggests that walking may reduce SBP for all ages and both sexes. Low-certainty evidence suggests that walking may reduce DBP and heart rate. Moderate- and low-certainty evidence suggests walking may reduce DBP and heart rate for all ages and both sexes.
增加身体活动已被推荐为预防和控制高血压的重要生活方式改变。步行是一种低成本的身体活动形式,大多数人都可以进行。研究表明,步行对血压的影响结果不一致。
确定步行作为一种身体活动干预对血压和心率的影响。
我们检索了以下数据库,截至 2020 年 3 月:Cochrane 高血压专业注册库、CENTRAL(2020 年,第 2 期)、Ovid MEDLINE、Ovid Embase、CINAHL、PsycINFO、SPORTDiscus、PEDro、世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台和 ClinicalTrials.gov。我们还检索了截至 2020 年 5 月的以下中文数据库:台湾期刊全文数据库、台湾学术文献数据库、中国知网期刊全文数据库、中国优秀博硕士学位论文全文数据库和万方医学在线。我们还与相关论文的作者联系,了解进一步发表和未发表的工作。检索没有语言限制。
纳入参与者年龄在 16 岁及以上,比较步行干预与非干预对照对血压和心率影响的随机对照试验。
我们使用 Cochrane 预期的标准方法学程序。在已发表的报告中未提供数据的情况下,我们联系了作者。以组间差异(MD)表示血压和心率的汇总结果,置信区间(CI)为 95%。我们进行了年龄和性别亚组分析。我们进行了敏感性分析,以评估样本量对我们发现的影响。
共有 73 项试验符合纳入标准。这些 73 项试验共纳入 5763 名参与者,来自 22 个国家。参与者年龄在 16 至 84 岁之间,女性人数是男性的 1.5 倍左右。纳入研究中步行干预的特点如下:大多数步行干预是在家/社区(n=50),但有监督(n=36 项中有 47 项报告了监督信息);平均干预时间为 15 周,平均每周步行时间为 153 分钟,大部分步行强度为中度。许多研究存在选择偏倚和实施偏倚的风险。主要结局我们发现有中等确定性证据表明步行可降低收缩压(SBP)(MD-4.11mmHg,95%CI-5.22 至-3.01;73 项研究,n=5060)。我们发现有中等确定性证据表明,在 40 岁及以下的参与者中,步行可降低 SBP(MD-4.41mmHg,95%CI-6.17 至-2.65;14 项研究,n=491),在 41 至 60 岁的参与者中,步行可降低 SBP(MD-3.79mmHg,95%CI-5.64 至-1.94,P<0.001;35 项研究,n=1959),在 60 岁及以上的参与者中,步行可降低 SBP(MD-4.30mmHg,95%CI-6.17 至-2.44,24 项研究,n=2610)。我们还发现有低确定性证据表明,在女性(MD-5.65mmHg,95%CI-7.89 至-3.41;22 项研究,n=1149)和男性(MD-4.64mmHg,95%CI-8.69 至-0.59;6 项研究,n=203)中,步行均可降低 SBP。次要结局我们发现有低确定性证据表明,步行可降低舒张压(DBP)(MD-1.79mmHg,95%CI-2.51 至-1.07;69 项研究,n=4711)和心率(MD-2.76 次/分钟,95%CI-4.57 至-0.95;26 项研究,n=1747)。我们发现有中等确定性证据表明,在 40 岁及以下的参与者中,步行可降低 DBP(MD-3.01mmHg,95%CI-4.44 至-1.58;14 项研究,n=491),在 41 至 60 岁的参与者中,步行可降低 DBP(MD-1.74mmHg,95%CI-2.95 至-0.52;32 项研究,n=1730),在 60 岁及以上的参与者中,步行可降低 DBP(MD-1.33mmHg,95%CI-2.40 至-0.26;23 项研究,n=2490)。我们发现有中等确定性证据表明,在男性中,步行可降低 DBP(MD-2.54mmHg,95%CI-4.84 至-0.24;6 项研究,n=203),在女性中,步行可降低 DBP(MD-2.69mmHg,95%CI-4.16 至-1.23;20 项研究,n=1000)。只有 21 项纳入的研究报告了不良事件。在这 21 项研究中,16 项报告无不良事件,其余 5 项研究报告了 8 项不良事件,其中膝关节损伤报告了 5 次。
中等确定性证据表明,步行可能降低 SBP。中等到低确定性证据表明,步行可能降低所有年龄和性别的 SBP。低确定性证据表明,步行可能降低 DBP 和心率。中等到低确定性证据表明,步行可能降低所有年龄和性别的 DBP 和心率。