Device-guided slow breathing with direct biofeedback of pulse wave velocity – acute effects on pulse arrival time and self-measured blood pressure

Author:

Mengden Thomas1,Bachler Martin2,Sehnert Walter3,Marschall Philip4,Wassertheurer Siegfried2

Affiliation:

1. Kerckhoff Clinic, ESH Excellence Centre, Bad Nauheim, Germany

2. Medical Signal Analysis, AIT Austrian Institute of Technology, Center for Health and Bioresources, Vienna, Austria

3. Institute for Clinical Research Sehnert, Dortmund, Germany

4. University of Giessen, Hesse, Germany

Abstract

Background There isevidence that device-guided slow breathing using biofeedback acutely reduces blood pressure (BP) and pulse wave velocity [i.e. increased pulse arrival time (PAT)]. Objectives The objectives of the study presented here were to test whether the results of changes observed in PAT in earlier studies are reproducible over 1 week and how changes in pulse wave velocity/PAT translate into absolute self-measured BP changes. Methods Patients with a systolic BP 130–160 mmHg or treated essential hypertension (21 females/23 males) were trained to perform unattended device-guided slow breathing exercises for 10 min daily over 5 days. Furthermore, they were skilled to perform self-measurement of BP before and after the breathing exercise using a validated upper-arm device. Results Office BP at screening [median (1, 3. Q)] was 137 (132, 142)/83 (79, 87) mmHg. We observed a significant (P < 0.05) increase in PAT of 5 ms (SD 12.5 ms) on average after 10 min of guided breathing and an additional 1 ms (P < 0.05, SD 8 ms) during the following 5 min of spontaneous breathing compared to baseline. PAT before the exercise remained constant over 5 days paralleled by constant self-measured BP before the exercise. Device-guided breathing was associated with a significant reduction of self-measured SBP of 5 mmHg (P < 0.01, SD 8 mmHg). Data furthermore demonstrated that these changes were highly reproducible over 1 week. Conclusions Device-guided slow breathing and biofeedback lead to reproducible and favorable changes (increase) in PAT and SBP (decrease).

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Assessment and Diagnosis,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,General Medicine,Internal Medicine

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