哈他瑜伽对血压、唾液α-淀粉酶和皮质醇功能的影响

John C Sieverdes, Martina Mueller, Mathew J Gregoski, Brenda Brunner-Jackson, Lisa McQuade, Cameron Matthews, Frank A Treiber
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引用次数: 36

摘要

目的:越来越多的证据(主要是在成人临床试验中)表明,瑜伽可以改善血压(BP)的控制,其潜在机制是下调下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺(HPA)轴和交感神经系统(SNS)。这项初步研究评估了哈他瑜伽是否有可能降低年轻人的血压,以及抑制SNS和/或HPA活动是否可能是改变血压的途径。设计:31名七年级学生被随机分配到哈达瑜伽课程(HYP)或注意力控制(AC)音乐或艺术课。基线和3个月评估包括静息血压;隔夜尿样;在睡前、醒来时、醒来后30分钟和60分钟采集唾液进行α-淀粉酶和皮质醇测定。结果:在干预前后分别对28名学生(HYP组14名,AC组14名)进行了评估。干预前后血压变化HYP组为-3.0/-2.0 mmHg, AC组为-0.07/-0.79 mmHg (p分别为0.30和0.57)。高血压前期亚组收缩压(SBP)/舒张压(DBP)变化(收缩压为75 -94百分位数),HYP组(n=4)为-10.75/-8.25 mmHg, AC组(n=5)为1.8/1.0 mmHg(收缩压=0.02;p代表DBP=0.09)。虽然SNS或HPA唤醒曲线(分别为α-淀粉酶和皮质醇的曲线下面积)的变化没有统计学意义上的组间差异,但HYP组α-淀粉酶激活的降低具有小到中等的效应大小(Cohen d=0.34;高血压前期d = 0.20)。结论:以学校为基础的哈他瑜伽项目显示出降低静息血压的潜力,特别是在高血压前期的青少年中。减少SNS驱动可能是一个潜在的神经激素途径受益于该计划。需要进行大规模的疗效/有效性随机临床试验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Effects of Hatha yoga on blood pressure, salivary α-amylase, and cortisol function among normotensive and prehypertensive youth.

Effects of Hatha yoga on blood pressure, salivary α-amylase, and cortisol function among normotensive and prehypertensive youth.

Effects of Hatha yoga on blood pressure, salivary α-amylase, and cortisol function among normotensive and prehypertensive youth.

Objective: Evidence is accumulating, predominantly among clinical trials in adults, that yoga improves blood pressure (BP) control, with downregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) projected as underlying mechanisms. This pilot study assessed whether Hatha yoga has the potential to reduce BP among youth and whether dampening of the SNS and/or HPA activity is a likely pathway of change.

Design: Thirty-one seventh graders were randomly assigned to a Hatha yoga program (HYP) or attention control (AC) music or art class. Baseline and 3-month evaluations included resting BP; overnight urine samples; and saliva collected at bedtime, upon awakening, and at 30 and 60 minutes after awakening for α-amylase and cortisol assays.

Results: Twenty-eight (14 in the HYP group and 14 in the AC group) students were assessed both before and after the intervention. BP changes from pre- to post-intervention were -3.0/-2.0 mmHg for the HYP group and -0.07/-0.79 mmHg for the AC group (p=0.30 and 0.57, respectively). Changes in systolic BP (SBP)/diastolic BP (DBP) for the prehypertensive (75th-94th percentiles for SBP) subgroup analyses were -10.75/-8.25 mmHg for the HYP group (n=4) versus 1.8/1.0 mmHg for the AC group (n=5) (p for SBP=0.02; p for DBP=0.09). Although no statistically significant group differences were observed with changes in SNS or HPA awakening curves (area under curve for α-amylase and cortisol, respectively), a small to moderate effect size was seen favoring a reduction of α-amylase activation for the HYP group (Cohen d=0.34; prehypertensive d=0.20).

Conclusions: A school-based Hatha yoga program demonstrated potential to decrease resting BP, particularly among prehypertensive youth. Reduced SNS drive may be an underlying neurohormonal pathway beneficially affected by the program. A large-scale efficacy/effectiveness randomized clinical trial is warranted.

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