TY - JOUR T1 - Decline in large elastic artery compliance with age: a therapeutic target for habitual exercise JF - British Journal of Sports Medicine JO - Br J Sports Med SP - 897 LP - 899 DO - 10.1136/bjsm.2004.016782 VL - 40 IS - 11 AU - P E Gates AU - D R Seals Y1 - 2006/11/01 UR - http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/40/11/897.abstract N2 - Aerobic exercise can favourably modify arterial compliance in middle-aged and older adults Cardiovascular diseases are prevalent in industrialised societies, and age is the dominant risk factor for morbidity and mortality.1 Consequently, a primary public health concern is to understand the mechanisms by which ageing is associated with cardiovascular diseases and to establish appropriate prevention and intervention strategies. One putative mechanism that has emerged as an important risk factor for cardiovascular disease is the age-associated decline in large artery compliance.2,3 This single degenerative alteration to the vasculature has profound effects on cardiovascular health, contributing to increased systolic blood pressure and pulse pressure, isolated systolic hypertension, reduced cardiovagal baroreflex sensitivity, increased aortic input impedance, left ventricular hypertrophy and diastolic dysfunction, atherosclerosis, and congestive heart failure.1–4 As such, the age-associated decline in arterial compliance is an important therapeutic target for habitual physical activity in the prevention of cardiovascular diseases. The purpose of this article is to highlight recent studies from our laboratory and other peer-reviewed literature that provide compelling experimental evidence that aerobic exercise can favourably modify arterial compliance in middle-aged and older adults.5–8 We will also present evidence suggesting that resistance training is potentially detrimental to arterial compliance unless combined with aerobic exercise. Arterial compliance (and its inverse, arterial stiffness) describes the ability of an artery to distend in response to a change in intravascular (transmural) pressure. By distending and recoiling, the large “elastic” arteries in the cardiothoracic region—for example, aorta and carotid arteries—function to buffer the oscillation in blood pressure caused by ventricular pumping, and help to convert intermittent blood flow from the ventricle into continuous blood flow in the vasculature.9 This compliant property of the artery is typically determined by simultaneous measurements of changes in arterial blood pressure and volume during the … ER -