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DOI: 10.1111/jch.12753
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Cardiorespiratory Fitness Suppresses Age‐Related Arterial Stiffening in Healthy Adults: A 2‐Year Longitudinal Observational Study

Yuko Gando,Haruka Murakami,Ryoko Kawakami,Keizô Yamamoto,Hiroshi Kawano,Noriko Tanaka,Susumu S. Sawada,Nobuyuki Miyatake,Motohiko Miyachi

Cardiorespiratory fitness
Arterial stiffness
Medicine
2015
Cardiorespiratory fitness is negatively associated with arterial stiffness, although it is unclear whether it is associated with prospective arterial stiffness changes. The authors examined cardiorespiratory fitness and arterial stiffness progression in a 2‐year follow‐up study of 470 healthy men and women aged 26 to 69 years. Peak oxygen uptake ( ) was measured at baseline using a graded cycle exercise test. Arterial stiffness was assessed using brachial‐ankle pulse wave velocity (ba PWV ) at baseline and after 2 years. Two‐year changes in ba PWV were significantly higher in patients in the lowest tertile (28.8±7.6 cm/s) compared with those in the highest tertile (−1.4±7.5 cm/s) ( P =.024) and were inversely correlated with ( r =−.112, P =.015). Stepwise multiple regression analysis revealed that age, glucose, ba PWV , , and sex were independent correlates of 2‐year changes in ba PWV , suggesting that higher cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with age‐related arterial stiffening suppression.
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    Cardiorespiratory Fitness Suppresses Age‐Related Arterial Stiffening in Healthy Adults: A 2‐Year Longitudinal Observational Study” is a paper by Yuko Gando Haruka Murakami Ryoko Kawakami Keizô Yamamoto Hiroshi Kawano Noriko Tanaka Susumu S. Sawada Nobuyuki Miyatake Motohiko Miyachi published in 2015. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.