Swimming Attenuates Blood Pressure and Oxidative Stress in Hypertensive Rats

Author:

Petkovic Anica1,Ravic Marko1,Plecevic Sasa2,Jeremic Jovana1,Srejovic Ivan3,Bolevich Sergey4,Rankovic Goran5,Turnic Tamara Nikolic1,Jakovljevic Vladimir34,Jeremic Nevena1

Affiliation:

1. University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Medical Sciences , Department of Pharmacy , Kragujevac , Serbia

2. Sports Medicine Association of Serbia , Belgrade , Serbia

3. University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Medical Sciences , Department of Physiology , Kragujevac , Serbia

4. 1st Moscow State Medical University I.M. Sechenov , Department of Human Pathology , Moscow , Russian Federation

5. University of Kosovska Mitrovica, Faculty of Sport and Physical Education , Department of Physiology , Kosovska Mitrovica , Serbia

Abstract

Abstract Hypertension presents one of the main risk factors for cardiovascular diseases which are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Structural and mechanical changes of the heart and blood vessels as well as overproduction of reactive oxygen species may occur due to the increased blood pressure. Therewith, the goal of our study was to estimate the effects and duration of swimming as a possible therapy approach on blood pressure and oxidative stress parameters in normotensive and hypertensive rats. The study was conducted on 60 male Wistar albino rats divided into two groups, normotensive and hypertensive rats. Each of these groups was divided into three subgroups according to the swimming protocol. The swimming training was kept constant (60 min/day, for five days a week) with two days of rest. After six or nine weeks of the swimming protocol, blood pressure and oxidative stress markers were measured. The control group rats were put in water for one minute a day, in order to avoid water-induced stress. Training significantly reduced systolic blood pressure in hypertensive rats, while diastolic pressure did not change in the group that swam six or nine weeks. The results showed that swimming increases the activity of all measured antioxidative parameters, while values of prooxidants varied depending on the training protocol. Our results confirmed that swimming, as an aerobic exercise, decreases blood pressure and has time-dependent positive system adaptations, especially on the antioxidant parameters.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Medicine

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