Learned control of heart rate during exercise in patients with borderline hypertension
Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat hea...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
Autor*in: |
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E-Artikel |
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Sprache: |
Englisch |
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1985 |
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6 |
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Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
in: European journal of applied physiology - 1928, 54(1985) vom: März, Seite 315-320 |
Übergeordnetes Werk: |
volume:54 ; year:1985 ; month:03 ; pages:315-320 ; extent:6 |
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NLEJ20450242X |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Learned control of heart rate during exercise in patients with borderline hypertension |
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520 | |a Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat heart-rate feedback and were asked to slow heart rate while exercising; six control (C) subjects received no feedback. Averaged over 5 days (25 training trials) the exercise heart-rate of the E group was 97.8 bt min−1, whereas the C group averaged 107 bt min−1 (P=0.03). Systolic blood pressure was unaffected by feedback training. Generally, changes in rate-pressure product reflected changes in heart-rate. Oxygen consumption was lower in the E than in the C group late in training. We conclude that neurally mediated changes associated with exercise in patients with borderline hypertension can be brought under behavioral control through feedback training. | ||
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700 | 1 | |a Engel, Bernard T. |4 oth | |
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(DE-627)NLEJ20450242X DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Learned control of heart rate during exercise in patients with borderline hypertension 1985 6 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat heart-rate feedback and were asked to slow heart rate while exercising; six control (C) subjects received no feedback. Averaged over 5 days (25 training trials) the exercise heart-rate of the E group was 97.8 bt min−1, whereas the C group averaged 107 bt min−1 (P=0.03). Systolic blood pressure was unaffected by feedback training. Generally, changes in rate-pressure product reflected changes in heart-rate. Oxygen consumption was lower in the E than in the C group late in training. We conclude that neurally mediated changes associated with exercise in patients with borderline hypertension can be brought under behavioral control through feedback training. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Fredrikson, Mats oth Engel, Bernard T. oth in European journal of applied physiology 1928 54(1985) vom: März, Seite 315-320 (DE-627)NLEJ188991794 (DE-600)1459054-2 1439-6327 nnns volume:54 year:1985 month:03 pages:315-320 extent:6 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00426152 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 54 1985 3 315-320 6 |
spelling |
(DE-627)NLEJ20450242X DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Learned control of heart rate during exercise in patients with borderline hypertension 1985 6 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat heart-rate feedback and were asked to slow heart rate while exercising; six control (C) subjects received no feedback. Averaged over 5 days (25 training trials) the exercise heart-rate of the E group was 97.8 bt min−1, whereas the C group averaged 107 bt min−1 (P=0.03). Systolic blood pressure was unaffected by feedback training. Generally, changes in rate-pressure product reflected changes in heart-rate. Oxygen consumption was lower in the E than in the C group late in training. We conclude that neurally mediated changes associated with exercise in patients with borderline hypertension can be brought under behavioral control through feedback training. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Fredrikson, Mats oth Engel, Bernard T. oth in European journal of applied physiology 1928 54(1985) vom: März, Seite 315-320 (DE-627)NLEJ188991794 (DE-600)1459054-2 1439-6327 nnns volume:54 year:1985 month:03 pages:315-320 extent:6 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00426152 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 54 1985 3 315-320 6 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ20450242X DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Learned control of heart rate during exercise in patients with borderline hypertension 1985 6 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat heart-rate feedback and were asked to slow heart rate while exercising; six control (C) subjects received no feedback. Averaged over 5 days (25 training trials) the exercise heart-rate of the E group was 97.8 bt min−1, whereas the C group averaged 107 bt min−1 (P=0.03). Systolic blood pressure was unaffected by feedback training. Generally, changes in rate-pressure product reflected changes in heart-rate. Oxygen consumption was lower in the E than in the C group late in training. We conclude that neurally mediated changes associated with exercise in patients with borderline hypertension can be brought under behavioral control through feedback training. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Fredrikson, Mats oth Engel, Bernard T. oth in European journal of applied physiology 1928 54(1985) vom: März, Seite 315-320 (DE-627)NLEJ188991794 (DE-600)1459054-2 1439-6327 nnns volume:54 year:1985 month:03 pages:315-320 extent:6 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00426152 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 54 1985 3 315-320 6 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ20450242X DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Learned control of heart rate during exercise in patients with borderline hypertension 1985 6 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat heart-rate feedback and were asked to slow heart rate while exercising; six control (C) subjects received no feedback. Averaged over 5 days (25 training trials) the exercise heart-rate of the E group was 97.8 bt min−1, whereas the C group averaged 107 bt min−1 (P=0.03). Systolic blood pressure was unaffected by feedback training. Generally, changes in rate-pressure product reflected changes in heart-rate. Oxygen consumption was lower in the E than in the C group late in training. We conclude that neurally mediated changes associated with exercise in patients with borderline hypertension can be brought under behavioral control through feedback training. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Fredrikson, Mats oth Engel, Bernard T. oth in European journal of applied physiology 1928 54(1985) vom: März, Seite 315-320 (DE-627)NLEJ188991794 (DE-600)1459054-2 1439-6327 nnns volume:54 year:1985 month:03 pages:315-320 extent:6 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00426152 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 54 1985 3 315-320 6 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ20450242X DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng Learned control of heart rate during exercise in patients with borderline hypertension 1985 6 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat heart-rate feedback and were asked to slow heart rate while exercising; six control (C) subjects received no feedback. Averaged over 5 days (25 training trials) the exercise heart-rate of the E group was 97.8 bt min−1, whereas the C group averaged 107 bt min−1 (P=0.03). Systolic blood pressure was unaffected by feedback training. Generally, changes in rate-pressure product reflected changes in heart-rate. Oxygen consumption was lower in the E than in the C group late in training. We conclude that neurally mediated changes associated with exercise in patients with borderline hypertension can be brought under behavioral control through feedback training. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Fredrikson, Mats oth Engel, Bernard T. oth in European journal of applied physiology 1928 54(1985) vom: März, Seite 315-320 (DE-627)NLEJ188991794 (DE-600)1459054-2 1439-6327 nnns volume:54 year:1985 month:03 pages:315-320 extent:6 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00426152 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 54 1985 3 315-320 6 |
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learned control of heart rate during exercise in patients with borderline hypertension |
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Learned control of heart rate during exercise in patients with borderline hypertension |
abstract |
Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat heart-rate feedback and were asked to slow heart rate while exercising; six control (C) subjects received no feedback. Averaged over 5 days (25 training trials) the exercise heart-rate of the E group was 97.8 bt min−1, whereas the C group averaged 107 bt min−1 (P=0.03). Systolic blood pressure was unaffected by feedback training. Generally, changes in rate-pressure product reflected changes in heart-rate. Oxygen consumption was lower in the E than in the C group late in training. We conclude that neurally mediated changes associated with exercise in patients with borderline hypertension can be brought under behavioral control through feedback training. |
abstractGer |
Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat heart-rate feedback and were asked to slow heart rate while exercising; six control (C) subjects received no feedback. Averaged over 5 days (25 training trials) the exercise heart-rate of the E group was 97.8 bt min−1, whereas the C group averaged 107 bt min−1 (P=0.03). Systolic blood pressure was unaffected by feedback training. Generally, changes in rate-pressure product reflected changes in heart-rate. Oxygen consumption was lower in the E than in the C group late in training. We conclude that neurally mediated changes associated with exercise in patients with borderline hypertension can be brought under behavioral control through feedback training. |
abstract_unstemmed |
Summary Twelve patients with borderline hypertension [⩽21.33/12.6, ⩾18.6/12.0 kPa (⩽160/ 95; ⩾ 140/90 mm Hg)] participated in an experiment aimed at testing whether they could learn to attenuate heart rate while exercising on a cycle ergometer. Six experimental (E) subjects received beat-to-beat heart-rate feedback and were asked to slow heart rate while exercising; six control (C) subjects received no feedback. Averaged over 5 days (25 training trials) the exercise heart-rate of the E group was 97.8 bt min−1, whereas the C group averaged 107 bt min−1 (P=0.03). Systolic blood pressure was unaffected by feedback training. Generally, changes in rate-pressure product reflected changes in heart-rate. Oxygen consumption was lower in the E than in the C group late in training. We conclude that neurally mediated changes associated with exercise in patients with borderline hypertension can be brought under behavioral control through feedback training. |
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