Exercise and blood pressure

The media has gotten a hold of a case report from the University of Maryland describing a 51-year old physician who, despite being a long distance runner, had a high heart scan score.

An example of the report can be found at

Heart Disease In A Marathon Runner: Is Too Much Exercise A Bad Thing?

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/03/070315091100.htm in Science Daily.



"The mystery was all the more intriguing because his resting blood pressure and fasting cholesterol levels, the usual measures of cardiovascular health, were in the normal range."


When this man was put on a treadmill for a stress test, his blood pressure skyrocketed from a normal 118/78 to 230/78--extremely high, even for exercise. The physicians reporting the case raised the question of whether long-distance running represents a risk for heart disease and if the high blood pressure with exercise is a contributor or cause of the high heart scan score.

These are phenomena we are very familiar with. We have stressed the importance of exercise blood pressure as a trigger for coronary plaque for years. While 230/78 is clearly too high, we find that any blood pressure over 170/80 with exercise adds to the fire and can trigger plaque growth.

However, I think it is absurd to suggest that marathon running itself is a trigger of coronary plaque. I think it is far more likely that the person described in the report had lipoprotein(a), a potent trigger for both exercise-induced hypertension and high CT heart scan scores in seemingly well people. He likely also suffered from a deficiency of vitamin D deficiency, another contributor. There's no need to indict exercise.

If you are in the Track Your Plaque program, you know that stress tests are of questionable helpfulness for the detection of hidden heart disease. But they are useful for assessment of blood pressure responses during exercise. If BP exceeds 170/80 at 10 mets (a measure of exercise effort achieved by walking 3.4 mph at a 14% grade for 3 minutes), then blood pressure may be a contributor to your heart scan score.

Comments (5) -

  • Anonymous

    6/8/2007 2:20:00 PM |

    I'm a marathon runner.  I don't have the problem of high blood pressure.  But I suffer from the usual irritations of life.  I found meditation to be useful.  I incorporate it into running as well.  With practice one can keep the heart rate from elevating while running.  If the heart rate is kept down, I assume the blood pressure is also.

  • Dr. Davis

    6/8/2007 3:09:00 PM |

    Unfortunately, that is an unsafe assumption to make.

  • hammarhead

    10/17/2009 2:05:45 PM |

    I am a 50 year old competetive mountain bicyclist. My resting BP is 110/60 and HR is 40. I take 10 mg Lipitor to keep Cholesterol at 175. Annual stress tests have been normal for 10 years. This year in the final 3 minutes BP went up to 170/?. I have now begun taking BP during my workouts and it jumps around from 120/70 - 190/100. should I be worried?

  • Anonymous

    1/17/2010 7:17:56 AM |

    Good post and this mail helped me alot in my college assignement. Say thank you you on your information.

  • Tribeast

    2/2/2011 8:49:01 PM |

    Endurance Athletes are known to consume abnormal amounts of Carbohydrates and marathoners are known to carboload before an event and on training so all that pasta bread and bagels probably are the culprit of the doctors plaque!!!

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Is your doctor using "leeches"?

Is your doctor using "leeches"?

What if you went to your doctor for a problem and he/she promptly placed leeches on your body?

Yeccchhhh! Would you go back? I'd bet that you'd run the other way as fast as your bleeding legs could take you. Outdated health practices like "bleeding" are outdated for good reason.

Then why would you allow your doctor to approach your heart disease prevention program by checking cholesterol and then waiting for symptoms to appear? That miserable approach leads to tragedy and death all too often--ask Bill Clinton! He might as well have had leeches!

Don't allow your doctor's ignorance or disinterest impede your prevention program. Get your coronary plaque measured, then attack it from all sides by knowing all causes, hidden and obvious. That's why Track Your Plaque is such an effective program.

I often wonder why more doctors aren't using this unbelievably powerful approach to deal with heart disease. But when I see colleagues implanting stents, defibrillators, and the like for many thousands of dollars per patient, the answers are obvious. Given a choice of a rational, effective program of prevention that pays the doctor a few hundred dollars for his time, versus $2000 to $10,000 for a procedure, you can see that the temptation is irresistible for many physicians.
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