Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2021 Jun 24;23(6):e25591. doi: 10.2196/25591.
When studied in community-based samples, the association of physical activity with blood pressure (BP) remains controversial and is perhaps dependent on the intensity of physical activity. Prior studies have not explored the association of smartwatch-measured physical activity with home BP.
We aimed to study the association of habitual physical activity with home BP.
Consenting electronic Framingham Heart Study (eFHS) participants were provided with a study smartwatch (Apple Watch Series 0) and Bluetooth-enabled home BP cuff. Participants were instructed to wear the watch daily and transmit BP values weekly. We measured habitual physical activity as the average daily step count determined by the smartwatch. We estimated the cross-sectional association between physical activity and average home BP using linear mixed effects models adjusting for age, sex, wear time, antihypertensive drug use, and familial structure.
We studied 660 eFHS participants (mean age 53 years, SD 9 years; 387 [58.6%] women; 602 [91.2%] White) who wore the smartwatch 5 or more hours per day for 30 or more days and transmitted three or more BP readings. The mean daily step count was 7595 (SD 2718). The mean home systolic and diastolic BP (mmHg) were 122 (SD 12) and 76 (SD 8). Every 1000 increase in the step count was associated with a 0.49 mmHg lower home systolic BP (P=.004) and 0.36 mmHg lower home diastolic BP (P=.003). The association, however, was attenuated and became statistically nonsignificant with further adjustment for BMI.
In this community-based sample of adults, higher daily habitual physical activity measured by a smartwatch was associated with a moderate, but statistically significant, reduction in home BP. Differences in BMI among study participants accounted for the majority of the observed association.
当在社区样本中进行研究时,体力活动与血压(BP)之间的关联仍然存在争议,并且这种关联可能取决于体力活动的强度。先前的研究尚未探讨智能手表测量的体力活动与家庭血压之间的关系。
我们旨在研究习惯性体力活动与家庭血压之间的关系。
同意参与电子弗雷明汉心脏研究(eFHS)的参与者被提供了一块研究用智能手表(Apple Watch Series 0)和蓝牙连接的家用血压袖带。参与者被指示每天佩戴手表并每周传输血压值。我们通过智能手表测量的平均日常步数来衡量习惯性体力活动。我们使用线性混合效应模型来估计体力活动与平均家庭血压之间的横断面关系,该模型调整了年龄、性别、佩戴时间、抗高血压药物使用和家族结构。
我们研究了 660 名 eFHS 参与者(平均年龄 53 岁,标准差 9 岁;387[58.6%]名女性;602[91.2%]名白人),他们每天佩戴智能手表 5 小时或更长时间,并且佩戴时间超过 30 天,并且传输了三个或更多的血压读数。平均每日步数为 7595(标准差 2718)。平均家庭收缩压和舒张压(mmHg)分别为 122(标准差 12)和 76(标准差 8)。每增加 1000 步,家庭收缩压降低 0.49mmHg(P=.004),家庭舒张压降低 0.36mmHg(P=.003)。然而,这种关联在进一步调整 BMI 后减弱且变得无统计学意义。
在这个基于社区的成年人样本中,通过智能手表测量的日常习惯性体力活动较高与家庭血压的适度但具有统计学意义的降低相关。研究参与者之间 BMI 的差异解释了观察到的大部分关联。