# Effect of exercise on ambulatory supine blood pressure in patients with resistant hypertension and peripheral artery disease with claudication

**Authors:** Nicola Lamberti, Elisabetta Pettenuzzo, Mario Tavani, Giovanni Piva, Lorenzo Caruso, Andrea Baroni, Sofia Straudi, Aaron Thomas Fargion, Roberto Manfredini, Fabio Manfredini

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s11739-025-04166-0 · Internal and Emergency Medicine · 2025-11-04

## TL;DR

A 6-month home-based walking program reduced blood pressure and improved mobility in patients with peripheral artery disease and hypertension.

## Contribution

Demonstrates that low-intensity interval training at home can lower blood pressure in resistant hypertension and improve PAD outcomes.

## Key findings

- Both resistant hypertension and controlled hypertension groups showed significant reductions in systolic blood pressure.
- Adherence to the exercise program correlated with greater blood pressure reductions.
- The program also improved ankle-brachial index and 6-minute walking distance in both groups.

## Abstract

This retrospective study examines the effects of a 6-month home-based walking low-intensity interval training (LIIT) program on systolic blood pressure (SBP) in a cohort of patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) and controlled (HT) or resistant hypertension (RH). From a cohort of 1011 PAD patients who completed the 6-month LIIT program, the data of those with hypertension without intercurrent therapy changes were analyzed. LIIT included eight bouts of in-home interval walking (walk:rest ratio of 1:1) at slow speed, progressively increased speed, and was maintained by a metronome. Office blood pressure was measured at baseline and after 5, 12, and 26 weeks by the same operator, with the patient lying in supine position. The ankle‒brachial index (ABI) and performance of the 6-min walking test (6MWD) were also assessed. Program updates were performed during visits, and adherence to exercise was verified and classified into tertiles according to the sessions executed. Among the 793 patients studied, 597 had HT, and 196 had RH. All patients safely completed the LIIT sessions (84 ± 11%). Both subgroups had significantly decreased SBP (RH: − 13 ± 15 mmHg; HT: − 10 ± 14 mmHg; between-group p = 0.052). Significant group-per-factor interactions (p < 0.001) for the decrease in the SBP were obtained according to adherence to exercise in both the RH and HT groups. The ABI of the worst limb significantly increased (RH: + 0.10 ± 0.13; HT: + 0.09 ± 0.12), as did the 6MWD (RH: + 35 ± 44 m; HT: + 39 ± 45 m). In PAD patients with claudication and hypertension, structured low-intensity in-home exercise, in addition to improving mobility, significantly reduced SBP values in RH patients, reinforcing the effect of medical therapy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** resistant hypertension (MONDO:0100078)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HT (MESH:D006973), PAD (MESH:D058729), claudication (MESH:D007383)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

1 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12948921/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12948921