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Divergent Blood Pressure Response After High-Intensity Interval Exercise: A Signal of Delayed Recovery?

Citation
Hunter, G. R., et al. “Divergent Blood Pressure Response After High-Intensity Interval Exercise: A Signal Of Delayed Recovery?”. Journal Of Strength And Conditioning Research, pp. 3004-3010.
Center University of Alabama at Birmingham
Author Gary R Hunter, Gordon Fisher, David R Bryan, Juliano H Borges, Stephen J Carter
Abstract

Hunter, GR, Fisher, G, Bryan, DR, Borges, JH, and Carter, SJ. Divergent blood pressure response after high-intensity interval exercise: a signal of delayed recovery? J Strength Cond Res 32(11): 3004-3010, 2018-The objective of this commentary is to highlight potential factors influential to the adaptation of high-intensity exercise. Herein, we present a rationale supporting the contention that elevated systolic blood pressure, after a bout of high-intensity exercise, may be indicative of delayed/incomplete recovery. Relative to type I skeletal muscle fibers, the unique cellular/vascular characteristics of type II muscle fibers may necessitate longer recovery periods, especially when exposed to repeated high-intensity efforts (i.e., intervals). In addition to the noted race disparities in cardiometabolic disease risk, including higher mean blood pressures, African Americans may have a larger percentage of type II muscle fibers, thus possibly contributing to noted differences in recovery after high-intensity exercise. Given that optimal recovery is needed to maximize physiological adaptation, high-intensity training programs should be individually-tailored and consistent with recovery profile(s). In most instances, even among those susceptible, the risk to nonfunctional overreaching can be largely mitigated if sufficient recovery is integrated into training paradigms.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Journal of strength and conditioning research
Volume
32
Issue
11
Number of Pages
3004-3010
Date Published
11/2018
ISSN Number
1533-4287
DOI
10.1519/JSC.0000000000002806
Alternate Journal
J Strength Cond Res
PMID
30239453
PMCID
PMC6291344
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