New Delhi: High blood pressure impairs one's breathing capacity by hardening the airways in the respiratory system, thereby increasing resistance, a study has found. However, being physically active can help by improving the functioning of respiratory muscles, resulting in better coordination between ventilation and blood flow in the lungs, researchers from the Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, found.
Hypertension, in which one's blood pressure remains unusually high, is known to thicken the blood vessels and harden the arteries. The researchers said that something similar happens with the bronchi -- branches of the main windpipe (trachea) -- in the respiratory system as well. "This is very important as the more hardened the bronchi becomes, the more difficult it becomes for air to enter and leave the lungs.
In the long run, this accelerated process of hardening of the bronchi makes breathing difficult for older people. Worse still, it's a cycle: lower oxygen saturation accelerates the ageing process throughout the organism," last author Rodolfo de Paula Vieira, an invited professor at the Federal University of Sao Paulo, said.
However, performing physical activity was found to partly protect the airways from hardening due to increased blood pressure. "We conclude that systemic arterial hypertension compromises lung function and mechanics in older adults and that a physically active lifestyle seems to partially accentuate these impairments.