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Published on Sep 28, 2024

Abstract

The objective:The goal of this experiment is to determine the immediate and short-term effect of different levels of exercise on blood pressure and pulse rate. It was hypothesized that blood pressure and pulse rate would rise due to exercise, and more rigorous exercise would raise both blood pressure and pulse rate higher than mild exercise.

It was further hypothesized that pulse and blood pressure would take longer to return to their resting measurements after the high-intensity exercise

Methods/Materials

Participants of the same gender and age were asked to complete ten minutes of mild exercise by walking, and ten minutes of more vigorous exercise by jumping rope. Using a digital blood pressure/pulse cuff, measurements of pulse rate and blood pressure were taken before the exercise, immediately after the exercise, and at regular intervals up to thirty minutes after the exercise. The data was recorded and analyzed

Results

Exercise elevated both blood pressure and pulse rate, increasing more after jumping rope than after walking. Immediately after jumping rope, the pulse rate was about twice as high as the immediate pulse rate after walking.

Blood pressure after jumping rope increased about 46% and 61% for systolic and diastolic, respectively, over walking.

Additionally, it took longer for pulse rate and blood pressure to return to their resting measurements after jumping rope than after walking.

The pulse and blood pressure after walking had returned to normal after a thirty-minute rest, but after jumping rope neither had returned to normal after a thirty-minute rest.

Conclusions/Discussion

Based on the data collected and the results of this study, all three parts of the hypothesis should be accepted. A larger sample size and control over factors such as size, fitness level, diet, and accuracy of measurements would increase the reliability of this experiment.

To find out more about the relationship between exercise and blood pressure and pulse rate, similar experiments could be designed. Comparisons after completing the same activity for a prolonged period of time versus a short period of time could be made.

It would also be interesting to see if the results of this experiment would stay the same if comparing age groups, genders, or fitness levels.

This information could be helpful in creating safe exercise plans and healthy lifestyles.

This project states that exercise increases blood pressure and pulse rate with more rigorous exercise having a larger effect both immediately and 30 minutes after the exercise

Science Fair Project done By Aaron Roth.