Community Based Mind-body Meditative Tai Chi Program and Its Effects on Improvement of Blood Pressure, Weight, Renal function, Serum Lipoprotein, and Quality of Life in Chinese Adults with Hypertension

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Author(s)
Sun, Jing
Buys, Nicholas
Year published
2015
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Obesity, metabolic syndrome, dyslipidemia, and poor quality of life are common conditions associated with hypertension, and incidence of hypertension is age dependent. However, an effective program to prevent hypertension and to improve biomedical factors and quality of life has not been adequately examined or evaluated in Chinese older adults.This study aims to examine the effectiveness of a Tai Chiprogram to improve health status in participants with hypertension and its related risk factors such as dyslipidemia, hyperglycemia, and quality of life in older adults in China. A randomised study design was used. At the ...
View more >Obesity, metabolic syndrome, dyslipidemia, and poor quality of life are common conditions associated with hypertension, and incidence of hypertension is age dependent. However, an effective program to prevent hypertension and to improve biomedical factors and quality of life has not been adequately examined or evaluated in Chinese older adults.This study aims to examine the effectiveness of a Tai Chiprogram to improve health status in participants with hypertension and its related risk factors such as dyslipidemia, hyperglycemia, and quality of life in older adults in China. A randomised study design was used. At the conclusion of the intervention 266 patients remained in the study. Blood pressure and biomedical factors were measured according to the World Diabetes Association standard 2002. A standardised quality of life measure was used to measure health related quality of life. It was found that a Tai Chi program to improve hypertension in older adults is effective in reducing blood pressure, body mass index, maintaining normal renal function and improving physical health of health related quality of life. It did not improve existing metabolic syndrome levels lipid level (dyslipidemia) or fasting glucose level (hyperglycemia) to prevent further deterioration of the biomedical risk factors. In conclusion, Tai Chi is effective in managing a number of risk factors associated with hypertension in Chinese older adults. Future research should examine a combination of Tai Chi and nutritional intervention to further reduce the level of biomedical risks.
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View more >Obesity, metabolic syndrome, dyslipidemia, and poor quality of life are common conditions associated with hypertension, and incidence of hypertension is age dependent. However, an effective program to prevent hypertension and to improve biomedical factors and quality of life has not been adequately examined or evaluated in Chinese older adults.This study aims to examine the effectiveness of a Tai Chiprogram to improve health status in participants with hypertension and its related risk factors such as dyslipidemia, hyperglycemia, and quality of life in older adults in China. A randomised study design was used. At the conclusion of the intervention 266 patients remained in the study. Blood pressure and biomedical factors were measured according to the World Diabetes Association standard 2002. A standardised quality of life measure was used to measure health related quality of life. It was found that a Tai Chi program to improve hypertension in older adults is effective in reducing blood pressure, body mass index, maintaining normal renal function and improving physical health of health related quality of life. It did not improve existing metabolic syndrome levels lipid level (dyslipidemia) or fasting glucose level (hyperglycemia) to prevent further deterioration of the biomedical risk factors. In conclusion, Tai Chi is effective in managing a number of risk factors associated with hypertension in Chinese older adults. Future research should examine a combination of Tai Chi and nutritional intervention to further reduce the level of biomedical risks.
View less >
Journal Title
American Journal of Cardiology
Copyright Statement
© 2015 Elsevier. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, providing that the work is properly cited.
Subject
Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
Traditional, complementary and integrative medicine not elsewhere classified