How long does it take to lower blood pressure with exercise

Medically Reviewed by Kumar Shital, DO on October 22, 2020

Making exercise a habit can help lower your blood pressure. It also gives you more energy, and it's a great way to ease stress and feel better.

Check in with your doctor first if you're not already active now. They'll make sure you're ready for exercise. Since an active lifestyle is good for your blood pressure, your doctor will likely be all for it.

You don't need to go to a gym. You just need to be active enough that you are breathing harder and making your heart beat a little faster. That includes brisk walking, jogging, swimming, biking, lifting weights, or doing yard work.

To pick an activity, two good questions to ask yourself are:

  1. What sounds like fun?
  2. Would you rather exercise in a group, or on your own?

There are three basic types of exercise:

  1. Cardiovascular, or aerobic, exercise can help lower your blood pressure and make your heart stronger. Examples include walking, jogging, jumping rope, bicycling (stationary or outdoor), cross-country skiing, skating, rowing, high- or low-impact aerobics, swimming, and water aerobics.
  2. Strength training builds strong muscles that help you burn more calories throughout the day. It’s also good for your joints and bones.
  3. Stretching makes you more flexible, helps you move better, and helps prevent injury.

Go for moderate activity, like brisk walking, at least 30 minutes a day, at least 5 days a week. If you’re short on time, vigorous activity, like jogging, gives you the same benefit in 20 minutes, 3 to 4 days a week.

If you’re not active today, gradually work up to this amount of exercise. If it takes you a few weeks to get there, that’s absolutely fine.

First, warm up. A 5- to 10-minute warm-up helps your body get moving and helps prevent injury.

Next, step up the intensity. Don't overdo it -- you should still be able to talk to someone while you're exercising. But if you’re able to sing, step it up a bit to make sure you’re getting the most out of your exercise.

Lastly, cool down. When you're done exercising, don't stop suddenly. Just slow down for a few minutes. This is especially important for someone with high blood pressure.

  1. Make it fun! You'll be more likely to stick with it.
  2. Schedule exercise into your daily routine. Plan when you're going to exercise and put it on your calendar.
  3. Find an exercise "buddy." This will help you stay motivated and enjoy it more.

Being active is one of the best things you can do for your blood pressure. Ask your doctor if there are any limits on what you can try.

When you exercise, notice how your body feels. It may take a while before your body gets used to it. That's normal.

It's also normal to breathe harder and to sweat, and for your heart to beat faster, when you're doing aerobic exercise.

But if you're feeling very short of breath, or if you feel like your heart is beating too fast or irregularly, slow down or rest.

Stop exercising if you feel chest pain, weakness, dizziness, lightheadedness, or pressure or pain in your neck, arm, jaw, or shoulder.

Call your doctor or seek emergency treatment immediately if these symptoms do not go away quickly, or if it happens again.

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There’s no way to avoid sounding alarmist about it: 46 percent of Americans now have hypertension, the number one risk factor for cardiovascular disease, according to revised guidelines by the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association (AHA) Task Force on Clinical Practice Guidelines.

Exercise isn’t the only answer, but a continuous workout regimen can lower blood pressure in the average by five to eight mmHg. University of Connecticut Blood Pressure Researcher Linda Pescatello, Ph.D. explains what that means for you and your blood pressure.

The New Guidelines On High Blood Pressure

Under the old guidelines, you had to have a blood pressure reading of 140 or 90 mmHg (millimeters of mercury, a unit of pressure). The former number is systolic pressure, the maximum pressure of a heartbeat; The latter is diastolic pressure, the pressure between beats. Thirty-two percent of Americans exceeded one or both of the old pressure figures. But now, the American Heart Association segments hypertension into stage one (130-139 or 80-89), and stage two (140+ or 90+). Pescatello says that the new guidelines are meant to increase awareness of the problem of high blood pressure. “Most of these people with hypertension who do hit the lower threshold can be treated with a lifestyle intervention, such as physical activity and dietary changes,” she says.

Even if you’re active every day, you could still be at risk for hypertension. Fixed risk factors, according to the AHA, include “psychosocial stress, premature birth, low birth weight, chronic kidney disease, family history, increased age, low socioeconomic status, male sex, and obstructive sleep apnea.” For people with hypertension, Pescatello recommends a home blood pressure monitor, which can cost less than $100. “It can tell you a lot of good information about your own blood pressure,” she says, “which you can share with a physician when you go in for your yearly physical.”

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How Exercise Affects Blood Pressure

Since 1988, Pescatello’s research has focused on the acute, or daily, effects of exercise on blood pressure. In 1991, she published her breakthrough study, which found that that participants’ blood pressure was lower on days when they exercised. The effect, called post-exercise hypotension, reduced mean arterial pressure for 12.7 hours for people with high blood pressure. For those with hypertension, 30 minutes of cycling lowered blood pressure for the entire day.

Post-exercise hypotension also mediates daily blood pressure spikes. “It’s called circadian variation,” Pescatello says. “Blood pressure will be highest in the morning upon waking, and spikes during the day have to do with a surge in sympathetic nervous stimulation or arousal.” Basically, our stressors—problems at work, conflicts with partners, a long line at Starbucks—won’t raise our blood pressure as much if we’ve exercised that morning.

Blood pressure will return to baseline the following day, but continuous daily exercise is what lowers blood pressure in the long run. “Structural adaptations begin to happen that will lower blood pressure, due to exercise training,” Pescatello says. “Those changes have been shown to happen within three to five days.” Over a period of months, exercise can lower the average person’s blood pressure by five to eight mmHg. “If your blood pressure is 134/82,” she says, “by exercise alone, you’re going to get out of the hypertensive range.”

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How Much Exercise To Lower Blood Pressure

For about two decades, the FITT Principle has been the standard of healthy and sustainable physical activity. Pescatello says the FITT recommendation for people with hypertension is an excellent guide for aerobic and resistance training. It goes like this:

Frequency: Aerobic: 5-7 days per week; resistance: 2-3 days per week
Intensity: Aerobic: moderate; resistance: 60-70 percent of 1-rep maximum (40-50 percent of 1-rep max for beginners)
Time: Aerobic: At least 30 minutes; resistance: 2-4 sets of 8-12 reps for each major muscle group
Type: Aerobic: Prolonged, rhythmic activities using major muscle groups; resistance: resistance machines, free weights, or bodyweight

Cross-training really counts.

Cardiovascular exercise was the long-preferred modality for overall health and lowering blood pressure. But in recent years, resistance and concurrent training (cardiovascular and resistance) have become recognized as similarly effective. A 2017 meta-analysis of 64 studies found that moderate-intensity dynamic resistance training reduced blood pressure by five to six mmHg for hypertensive adults and two to three mmHg for prehypertensive adults. Dynamic is the keyword. “In a bicep curl, the muscle is shortening and then lengthen[ing] during [a] contraction,” Pescatello says. That’s a dynamic move. A non-dynamic, or static, movement would be a plank.

The blood pressure-lowering results from the resistance training meta-analysis came from an average of 14 weeks of dynamic resistance training, performed an average of three days per week. Unfortunately, the specifics of load, intensity, recovery, and duration weren’t reported well enough to levy a recommendation on a specific resistance training routine.

A similar 2016 meta-analysis of concurrent training offers more routine-specific information. In studies where blood pressure examination was the primary outcome, concurrent training reduced both systolic and diastolic blood pressure. Participants did aerobic exercise at 55 percent of maximal oxygen consumption and dynamic resistance training at 60 percent of one-rep maximum for an average of one hour three days per week for 20 weeks.

Harder intensities and longer durations will yield better results. The most important thing, Pescatello says, is consistency. “The larger issue here is long-term adherence,” she says. “Most people can tolerate a lesser intensity and more frequency and duration. Long-term, you’ll accumulate the same health benefits.”

The bottom line is that it’s possible to lower blood pressure with exercise – especially with a workout app like Aaptiv.