Breathing Exercise Could Reduce Blood Pressure

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Breathing Exercise Could Reduce Blood

Pressure
Lower your blood pressure and strengthen your respiratory muscles in just 30
breaths a day using this simple high-resistance breathing workout.

Dr. Joseph Mercola


8 hr ago
20

STORY AT-A-GLANCE
 High-resistance inspiratory muscle strength training (IMST) rivals
medication and lifestyle changes for lowering blood pressure
 People doing the high-resistance breathing exercise for six weeks had an
average reduction of 9 mmHg in systolic blood pressure; the daily training
consists of 30 breaths a day
 The breathing exercise takes just five to 10 minutes a day, with benefits
noticeable within two weeks
 It involves the use of an inhaler-like device, which provides resistance as
you take a breath, causing your respiratory muscles to get a workout
 Other breathing techniques lower blood pressure by increasing the
bioavailability of nitric oxide and evoking your body’s built-in relaxation
response

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A simple breathing exercise that strengthens respiratory muscles could be


beneficial for the 47% of U.S. adults who have high blood pressure. 1 The
exercise, known as high-resistance inspiratory muscle strength training (IMST),
worked so well that it rivaled medication and lifestyle changes for lowering
blood pressure.2

High blood pressure is a significant burden to public health, as it’s a major risk
factor for coronary, cerebrovascular and peripheral vascular diseases, along with
heart attack and stroke.3 More than 1.28 billion people worldwide4 suffer from
the condition, with most offered medications as the first line of treatment.

High blood pressure drugs carry “burdensome” side effects that often cause
people to stop taking them, researchers noted in The Journal of Alternative and
Complementary Medicine.5 Further, about 46% of adults with high blood
pressure don’t know that they have it, putting them at increased risk of related
heart, brain and kidney diseases.6

Breathing exercises could again provide an answer, as it takes just minutes a day
to glean the benefits. Even for those without high blood pressure — or who
don’t know they’re at risk — spending five minutes on focused breath training
offers myriad benefits with virtually no downside.

Five-Minute Daily Breathing Workout Lowers


Blood Pressure
For the study, researchers from the University of Colorado Boulder and the
University of Arizona split 128 adults aged 18 to 82 years into two groups. One
group did high-resistance IMST training consisting of 30 breaths a day for six
weeks.

The other group did a low-resistance sham breathing exercise for the same
period.7 Conventionally, IMST is used for recovery in people who have been on
a ventilator, as well as to support breathing in those with asthma, chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease and other breathing disorders. 8

While no changes in systolic blood pressure (SBP) or diastolic blood pressure


(DBP) occurred in the placebo group, those doing the high-resistance breathing
exercise had an average reduction of 9 mmHg in systolic blood pressure. 9

According to study author Daniel Craighead, the reduction is similar to what


may be achieved with medication and potentially more effective than weight
loss or reducing sodium in your diet. He told Insider, “People can expect fairly
rapid results. We would expect that if you went longer, blood pressure would go
down even more.” He recommended the technique for those with high blood
pressure and those hoping to prevent it:10

“What's really exciting about this is that it's helpful for a wide range of adults.
People with blood pressure at an unhealthy level could stand to benefit from
adding this to their routine now. But someone could start in their thirties and
stick to it for years to help delay or prevent hypertension."

The breathing exercise takes just five to 10 minutes a day, with benefits
noticeable within two weeks. It involves the use of an inhaler-like device, which
provides resistance as you take a breath, causing your respiratory muscles to get
a workout. While the trial used a $500 device, less expensive models are
commercially available right now.11

According to the study, “These compiled findings from multiple independent


trials provide the strongest evidence to date that high-resistance IMST evokes
clinically significant reductions in SBP and DBP.”12

Also noteworthy, the participants did the breathing exercises for six weeks, then
took a six-week break. When their blood pressure was tested after the break, it
was nearly as low as it was immediately after the exercise session ended. The
researchers are now looking into whether a “maintenance dose” of the breathing
exercise could help extend the blood pressure reductions even longer. 13

Controlled Breathing Calms Your Brain,


Relieves Stress
One way that IMST appears to be beneficial is by toning and strengthening the
muscles used in breathing. Past research also found that high-resistance IMST
lowered blood pressure and improved endothelial function in middle-age and
older adults with above-normal blood pressure. The breathing technique
increased the bioavailability of nitric oxide, helping widen arteries, and reduced
oxidative stress.14
Stress is another factor in high blood pressure and relieving it may offer some
relief. This is another mechanism by which controlled breathing may help blood
pressure. The way you breathe — whether fast or slow, shallow or deep — is
intricately tied to your body as a whole, sending messages that affect your
mood, your stress levels and even your immune system.

In early 2017, researchers discovered breathing may directly affect your brain
activity, including your state of arousal and higher-order brain function. 15 As
such, controlled breathing exercises may modify stress coping behaviors and
initiate appropriate balance in cardiac autonomic tone, which is a term that
describes your heart’s ability to respond to and recover from stressors. 16

Also intriguing is a 2016 study published in BMC Complementary and


Alternative Medicine, which found yogic breathing reduces levels of
proinflammatory biomarkers in saliva.17 Controlled breathing triggers your
relaxation response, activating your parasympathetic nervous system, which in
turn may slow down your heart rate and digestion while helping you feel calm.

By evoking your body’s built-in relaxation response you can change the
expression of your genes for the better, including in areas related to energy
metabolism, mitochondrial function, insulin secretion, the inflammatory
response and stress-related pathways.18

Slow breathing also reduces blood pressure and enhances baroreflex sensitivity,
a mechanism to control blood pressure via heart rate, in people with high blood
pressure.19 The finding was so strong that researchers suggested slow breathing
“appear[s] potentially beneficial in the management of hypertension.” 20

Which Breathing Techniques Are Best?


It’s possible to incorporate a variety of beneficial breathing techniques into your
day to propel yourself toward optimal health — healthy blood pressure levels
included. One of the most basic breathing techniques is to make sure you're
always breathing through your nose. Mouth breathing tends to promote
hyperventilation, which decreases tissue oxygenation.

Mouth breathing also results in diminished levels of CO2 in your body and a
decreased ability to filter toxic pollutants from the air. Mouth breathing can also
elevate your heart rate and blood pressure, sometimes resulting in fatigue and
dizziness.21

The Buteyko Breathing Method is one way to reverse health problems


associated with improper breathing, the most common of which include over-
breathing and mouth breathing. When you stop mouth breathing and learn to
bring your breathing volume toward normal, you have better oxygenation of
your tissues and organs. The Buteyko Breathing Method allows you to retain
and gently accumulate CO2, which calms breathing and reduces anxiety:

1. Take a small breath into your nose, followed by a small breath out
2. Hold your nose for five seconds in order to hold your breath, and then
release your nose to resume breathing
3. Breathe normally for 10 seconds
4. Repeat the sequence

Box breathing is another form of breath control that triggers the


parasympathetic nervous system to help manage stress. This technique, also
called square breathing or four-square breathing, is used by Navy SEALS to
help reduce stress in high-pressure situations.

It involves nose breathing to slow over-breathing and raise CO2 levels to


balance oxygenation. To begin practicing box breathing, get in a quiet place
where you can concentrate and maintain good posture. Work up to using the
technique for five-minute increments: 22

 Step 1 — Begin by exhaling the air out of your lungs to a slow count of
four. Some recommend exhaling through your mouth, others through your
nose.
 Step 2 — Hold your breath for a slow count of four.
 Step 3 — Inhale slowly to a slow count of four through your nose,
keeping your back straight and breathing through your abdomen so your
shoulders do not rise.
 Step 4 — Hold your breath for a slow count of four and return to step 1.

You can also experiment with other forms of controlled breathing to see if it
makes a difference for you. Here are several examples of yogic breathing
compiled by the Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine: 23

 Nadishodhana/Nadishuddhi (Alternate nostril breathing) — With your


right thumb, close the right nostril and inhale through left nostril. Closing
the left nostril, exhale through right, following which inhalation should be
done through right nostril. Closing the right nostril, breath out through left
nostril. This is one round. The procedure is repeated for desired number
of rounds.
 Suryanuloma Viloma (Right uninostril breathing) — Closing the left
nostril, both inhalation and exhalation should be done through right
nostril, without altering the normal pace of breathing.
 Chandranuloma Viloma (Left uninostril breathing) — Procedure similar
to Suryanuloma Viloma, breathing is done through left nostril alone, by
closing the right nostril.
 Suryabhedana (Right nostril initiated breathing) — Closing the left
nostril, inhalation should be done through right nostril. At the end of
inhalation, close the right nostril and exhale through the left nostril. This
is one round. The procedure is repeated for desired number of rounds.
 Ujjayi (Psychic breath) — Inhalation and exhalation are done through the
nose at normal pace, with partial contraction of glottis, which produce
light snoring sound. One should be aware of the passage of breath through
the throat during the practice.
 Bhramari (Female honeybee humming breath) — After a full inhalation,
closing the ears using the index fingers, one should exhale making a soft
humming sound similar to that of a female honeybee.
Lowering Blood Pressure With Herbs and
Magnesium
Breathing techniques are important but they shouldn’t be considered a panacea.
Optimizing your blood pressure requires a comprehensive approach for best
results. For instance, imbalanced gut microbes, known as gut dysbiosis, play a
role in high blood pressure.24 A strong link between sleep quality and a type of
high blood pressure known as resistant hypertension, which does not respond to
typical drug-based treatments, has also been found. 25

Getting a good night’s sleep, eating right, exercising, addressing stress and
avoiding environmental toxins like air pollution are all important for healthy
blood pressure. Eating a diet rich in magnesium could also reduce the risk of
high blood pressure,26 as can herbs and spices.

In a controlled feeding study of people with known risk factors for heart disease,
eating 6.5 grams of 24 herbs and spices — such as basil, thyme, cinnamon and
turmeric27 — each day lowered systolic and diastolic blood pressure. 28 Study
author Penny Kris-Etherton said in a news release: 29

“I think it’s really significant that participants consumed an average American


diet throughout the study and we still found these results. We didn’t decrease
sodium, we didn’t increase fruits and vegetables, we just added herbs and
spices. It begs the next question that if we did alter the diet … how much better
would the results be?”

As we’ve seen time and again, whether you’re interested in lowering your blood
pressure or simply keeping it in a healthy range, small daily habits — like
engaging in breathing exercises and eating herbs and spices — add up to big
changes for your health.

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