Physical activity is reduced in UK Biobank participants that develop postural hypotension
Abstract
Introduction
Up to 30% of adults over 65 experience postural hypotension (PH) – a significant drop in blood pressure (BP) upon standing. PH is associated with increased risk of falls, frailty, and mortality. Using derived accelerometer data and linked healthcare records, we assessed the relationship between PH and physical activity (PA) in UK Biobank participants.
Methods
We used UK Biobank derived accelerometery data detailing the average time participants spent sleeping (SlA), sedentary (SeA), doing light activity (LA), or moderate & vigorous activity (MVPA). We ascertained participants with a PH diagnosis prior to the accelerometer wear period, those with a diagnosis after this period. We assessed the associations between PH and PA using generalised linear models, compared to controls without PH or recorded hypotension at any timepoint.
Results
96623 participants had sufficient accelerometer data quality. Compared to controls, those with prevalent PH, SlA was 16 minutes lower, (p<0.001), LA was 19 minutes lower (p<0.001) and MVPA 7 minutes lower (p<0.001). SeA was not significantly different. In comparison, those who went on to develop PH had 7 more minutes sleeping (p = 0.012), 22 more sedentary minutes (p<0.001), 24 fewer minutes of LA (p<0.001) and 6 minutes fewer of MVPA (p<0.001) than controls. The mean length of sedentary bouts were 30 seconds longer in those who developed PH (p=0.01) and 55 seconds longer in those with prevalent PH, while active bouts were 26 seconds shorter (p<0.001) and 18 seconds shorter respectively (p<0.001).
Conclusions
These results suggest that changes in physical activity often precipitate clinical diagnoses of PH which highlights the importance of exercise and how changes can be clinically relevant. Further research is needed to understand whether reduced activity is a cause of PH, or a symptom of its development.
Comments
Poster
Really interesting poster! Your findings feel like they're borne out in my very subjective experience. Just a couple of questions:
Thank you for your comments!…
Thank you for your comments! The sedentary and sleep times, are separate from each other, rather than sleep being a subset of sedentary.
On your second point, I’m definitely inclined to agree! I also feel that there may be a bit of a cyclical nature to it - people with PH may mobilise less due to symptoms, and the symptoms then get worse due to conditioning, and so on (just my thoughts though - not based on any numbers yet!)
Thank you for your comments!…
Thank you for your comments! The sedentary and sleep times are separate, rather than sleep being a subset of sedentary time.
On your second point, I'd think so yes! My thought is that there might be a bit of a cyclical nature to it - symptoms leading to reduced mobilisation, which leads to symptoms increasing and so on (but this is just a theory - I don't have the numbers to back that up!)
Further qualitative data could complement nicely
As an Exeter Alumni it's really nice to see such important research being undertaken.
I agree with Charlotte's questions about whether PH could contribute to a hesitance to mobilise/be active. Some qualitative data of patient's experiences and their perceived timeline of symptoms vs. reduced physical activity may shed light on the role PH has in activity levels.
Thank you! I do think there…
Thank you! I do think there's likely a reluctance to mobilise in those who have symptomatic PH. Unfortunately there isn't any data on this in UK Biobank, but I definitely agree that it would be important to study - particularly when looking into the causal side of the relationship!
Thanks for this good poster…
Thanks for this good poster. I believe the conclusion is interesting. It is worth looking into the relationship between postural hypotension and decreased activity and their causal relationship.
Thanks for the kind comments…
Thanks for the kind comments. I agree that assessing the causal relationship is an important next step - potentially helpful for treatment/rehabilitation and prevention!
Really interesting poster,…
Really interesting poster, would be great to look into data relating this to fear of falling, to help establish relationships!