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Just 5 Minutes of Exercise a Day May Lower Your Blood Pressure

Replacing just five minutes a day of sedentary activities or low-intensity movements with moderate-to-vigorous physical activity could help lower blood pressure, a new study finds.

Small changes in your daily routine — like sitting, walking, or standing a bit less, and instead doing activities to really get your heart rate up — are enough to make a difference, the research suggests.
“Our findings suggest that, for most people, exercise is key to reducing blood pressure, rather than less strenuous forms of movement such as walking,” lead study author Joanna Blodgett, PhD, of the Institute of Sport, Exercise, and Health at University College London, said in a statement.

“The good news is that whatever your physical ability, it doesn’t take long to have a positive effect on blood pressure,” Dr. Blodgett said. You don’t necessarily have to hit the gym, Blodgett added. You can improve your blood pressure with all types of moderate-to-vigorous exercise, like taking stairs or cycling when you run errands.

Study Subjects Lowered Both Systolic and Diastolic Blood Pressure

Researchers examined data from nearly 15,000 volunteers who had their blood pressure taken and wore activity trackers for 24 hours to record all of their movements, including sleep and sedentary time. Overall, participants spent an average of about 7.1 hours sleeping, 10.7 hours sitting or being sedentary, 3.2 hours standing, 2.7 hours walking, and just 16 minutes engaged in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity like cycling, jogging, or climbing stairs.

The researchers found that replacing sedentary or low-intensity activities with moderate-to-vigorous exercise for five minutes had a measurable impact on blood pressure.

This small shift reduced systolic blood pressure — the “top” number that indicates how much pressure blood exerts against artery walls when the heart beats — by an average of 0.68 mmHg (millimeters of mercury). It also lowered diastolic blood pressure — the “bottom” number that indicates the pressure blood exerts against artery walls when the heart rests between beats — by an average of 0.54 mmHg, according to findings published in the journal Circulation.

Small Changes Can Lead to Meaningful Improvements

While five minutes extra of exercise is the minimum amount needed to see any change in blood pressure, scientists also found that it might not take more than an extra 10 or 20 minutes a day of exercise for people to see clinically meaningful improvements in blood pressure with the potential to impact their overall health.

Replacing 20 to 27 minutes a day of sedentary or less active movements with moderate-to-vigorous physical activity could result in a clinically meaningful 2 mmHg reduction in systolic blood pressure, the study found. Similarly, swapping out 10 to 15 minutes of less active behaviors with exercise could result in a clinically meaningful 1 mmHg reduction in diastolic blood pressure.

“If you want to change your blood pressure, putting more demand on the cardiovascular system through exercise will have the greatest effect,” Blodgett said in the statement.

The study wasn’t designed to prove whether or how replacing sedentary or low-intensity movement with more vigorous activity might directly improve blood pressure.

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