After exercise, blood pressure returns to your normal resting rate after 10 minutes or more. A significant drop in blood pressure after stopping exercising may indicate that you have an underlying heart condition.
About 20 minutes.
No it is not normal. See your physician right away. You could be getting gas, air or fluid buildup and it is not normal before, during or after exercise.
At the normal rate.
Resting blood pressure for a male (optimum) is 120/70. It will be elevated after exercise or a stressful event.
It's dependable on how normal is your current blood pressure. For normal blood pressure, the increase during and right after exercise ( depending on how strong it has been,) may not increase too much. And it depends of your age as well, and of your lifestyle, too. Suppose that you have a normal blood pressure, 120x80, systolic and diastolic numbers, after a 30 minutes of exercise, it might raise to 140x90 on average.
It (and your blood pressure) gradually returns to your normal resting rate. Unless you start feeling crushing pains, running through to your back, you get dizzy, pale, cold, clammy and tingling in your left arm, then I suggest you call an ambulance.
No. Any exercise, but particularly cardiovascular exercise...aerobic (anything that makes you out of breath) with strengthen the heart muscle, making the heart more efficient. Blood pressure will temporarily rise during exercise, but should return to normal when you stop. Some exercises can put unneccessary pressure on the heart , like weight lifting or squash - really strenuous activities. If your blood pressure is very high (over 180 systolic) you should consult a doctor before doing any exercise. If you are mildly hypertensive (130-140) or less it should be safe to do exercise.
Try replacing the oil pressure switch located behind the distributor just before the firewall, about $30 at autozone
Maintain normal weight reduce sodium exercise drink plenty of "water" Much will depend on how high blood pressure is as to what you can do in the above listed things. Very high blood pressure, do not exercise without doctor's permission.
After knee replacement surgery, as the time passes and adoption of correct exercise for your knee, LC returns to normal. However, one can suffer from pain.
For a while it may go down but afyer a while it will come back to normal.
It's a process called homeostasis. The body cannot tolerate very long periods of increased blood pressure without damaging major organs. After the body realizes that the demands that have been brought upon it (exercise) is over, it is in its best interest to revert back to "normal" blood pressure parameters.
A normal result of an exercise stress test shows normal electrocardiogram tracings and heart rate, blood pressure within the normal range, and no angina, unusual dizziness, or shortness of breath.