# Isometric Exercises and Blood Pressure: What the Evidence Actually Says
Published: 2026-05-25
Isometric Exercises and Blood Pressure: What the Evidence Actually Says | Matter
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Lifestyle & Heart Health
# Isometric Exercises and Blood Pressure: What the Evidence Actually Says
Wall sits and isometric hand grips came out on top of the 2023 BJSM exercise meta-analysis for blood-pressure reduction. Here’s the evidence, the protocol, and the practical version for adults over 50.
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Medically reviewed by Dr. Nouman Kazmi, MBBS FCPS](https://getmatter.co/pages/matter-cardiologist-dr-syed-nouman-kazmi "View reviewer profile")
·
9 min read
~8 mmHg
Avg systolic drop in meta-analysis
4×2 min
Standard session protocol
3×/wk
Frequency in the trials
12 wks
Typical window for measurable change
## Key Takeaways
* The 2023 BJSM meta-analysis of 270 randomised trials (15,827 participants) found that isometric exercise produced the largest reductions in resting blood pressure of any exercise type, including aerobic and dynamic resistance work.
* Average reductions reported across the isometric trials: roughly 8 mmHg systolic and 4 mmHg diastolic. For context, NICE expects a 5–10 mmHg systolic drop from a first-line antihypertensive medication.
* The standard protocol that produced these results: 4 holds of 2 minutes each, 1 minute of rest between holds, 3 sessions per week, sustained over at least 8 to 12 weeks.
* The two most accessible forms are wall sits (a leg-based isometric position against a wall) and isometric hand-grip exercise (squeezing a dynamometer or strong grip device at 30% of maximum effort).
* Isometric exercise is generally safe for adults over 50, but anyone on prescribed blood pressure medication, with known cardiovascular disease, or with diagnosed glaucoma should speak to their GP before starting a structured isometric programme.
In This Article
1. [Why isometric exercise affects blood pressure](#why-it-works)
2. [What the 2023 BJSM meta-analysis actually showed](#bjsm-meta)
3. [The protocol that works: wall sits and hand grips](#protocol)
4. [How to start safely if you’re over 50](#how-to-start)
5. [Where this fits with aerobic and resistance work](#wider-picture)
6. [Where Daily Beets fits](#daily-beets)
7. [Frequently asked questions](#faq)
8. [The bottom line](#bottom-line)
## Why isometric exercise affects blood pressure
You saw the headline. Wall sits, three times a week, for two minutes at a time, dropping blood pressure as much as the standard antihypertensive medication. Surely a small body of internet enthusiasm rather than serious science. Then you noticed the source was the *British Journal of Sports Medicine*, a meta-analysis of 270 trials and almost 16,000 people, and the conclusion held up. So now you want to know whether this is something you should actually be doing.
Isometric exercise is the kind of exercise where the muscle contracts but doesn’t shorten. Holding a plank. Sitting against a wall as if you were sitting on an invisible chair. Squeezing a strong grip device at sub-maximal effort and not letting go for two minutes. The muscle is working, but the joint doesn’t move.
The vascular effect appears to come from the way that sustained sub-maximal contraction partially restricts blood flow through the working muscle. Inside that muscle, oxygen drops, metabolites build up, and the body responds by triggering a downstream cascade that improves how the small blood vessels regulate themselves over time. The nitric oxide pathway, the endothelial response to shear stress, and the autonomic nervous system all appear to be involved.
The result, when measured weeks later, is a lower resting blood pressure. The mechanism is fundamentally an adaptation, the same way a muscle gets stronger or aerobic capacity improves with training. The cardiovascular system gets better at managing pressure.
[🧬
Related Article
Nitric Oxide Explained: A Simple Guide to Circulation and Vascular Health](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/nitric-oxide-explained-a-simple-guide-to-circulation-and-vascular-health)
## What the 2023 BJSM meta-analysis actually showed
Edwards and colleagues at Canterbury Christ Church University published their meta-analysis in the *British Journal of Sports Medicine* in July 2023. They pulled together 270 randomised controlled trials that measured blood pressure changes from different forms of exercise, with a combined participant pool of 15,827 people.
They compared five exercise modalities against each other:
* **Aerobic exercise.** Walking, running, cycling. Average drop: roughly 4–5 mmHg systolic.
* **Dynamic resistance training.** Standard weights, full range of motion. Average drop: roughly 4 mmHg systolic.
* **Combined training.** Aerobic plus resistance. Average drop: roughly 6 mmHg systolic.
* **High-intensity interval training (HIIT).** Average drop: roughly 4–5 mmHg systolic.
* **Isometric exercise.** Wall sits, hand grips, planks. Average drop: roughly 8 mmHg systolic and 4 mmHg diastolic.
The isometric result was the largest. It surprised researchers, including the authors themselves. The standard expectation in cardiology had been that aerobic exercise produced the most consistent BP benefits, and resistance work was second-tier. Isometric work had been studied for decades, mostly in the form of hand-grip protocols, but it hadn’t been brought into a single comparative framework before.
A few caveats are worth knowing about. The isometric studies in the meta-analysis tended to be smaller and shorter than the aerobic ones, so the precision of the estimate is a bit wider. Most isometric trials use highly controlled protocols (the wall sit at a specific knee angle, the hand grip at exactly 30% of maximum voluntary contraction). Translating the trial protocol into everyday practice is part of why this article exists.
None of this means aerobic exercise is obsolete or that walking has lost its place. Walking and aerobic work remain the most evidence-rich movement intervention across all-cause mortality, not just blood pressure. What the meta-analysis showed is that for blood pressure specifically, adding even small amounts of isometric work to an existing routine is one of the most useful movement additions available.
[🌿
Related Article
How to Lower Blood Pressure Naturally: A UK Guide](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/how-to-lower-blood-pressure-naturally)
~8
**mmHg average systolic blood pressure reduction across isometric exercise trials in the 2023 BJSM meta-analysis.** For comparison, NICE expects a 5 to 10 mmHg systolic reduction from a first-line antihypertensive medication. The two interventions aren’t interchangeable, but the size of the isometric effect is clinically meaningful.
## The protocol that works: wall sits and hand grips
The trials that produced those numbers used remarkably consistent protocols. If you want the version backed by the research, this is it:
1
### Pick your isometric movement
The two most common in the research literature are wall sits and isometric hand grips. Wall sits engage the bigger leg muscles and tend to produce slightly larger effect sizes; hand grips are easier to do anywhere and require nothing more than a strong grip device or even a hand towel. Both work. Pick the one you’re likely to actually do three times a week.
2
### Use the 4 by 2 minute structure
Hold for 2 minutes. Rest for 1 minute. Repeat four times. Total session time: 11 minutes including rests. This is the protocol used in most of the isometric trials and is what produced the headline reductions.
3
### Three sessions per week, on non-consecutive days
Monday, Wednesday, Friday. Or Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday. The recovery day matters. The trials didn’t see further gains from going daily, so three sessions a week is the maintenance dose.
4
### For wall sits: get the angle right
Slide down a wall until your thighs are roughly parallel to the floor (knee angle around 90 degrees). Feet about hip-width apart. Back flat against the wall. Hands resting on thighs or relaxed at your sides. Breathe normally throughout. If 2 minutes at 90 degrees is too much when you start, hold at a shallower angle (knees less bent) and work down over weeks.
5
### For hand grips: 30% of your maximum, both hands alternating
A spring hand-grip device or a dynamometer is ideal. Squeeze to roughly 30% of your maximum effort (not full strength, around the level where you could keep going) and hold. Alternate hands across the 4 holds. Hand-grip trials are sometimes done with one hand for the full session, but most modern protocols alternate.
Breathing matters. Do not hold your breath during isometric work. The Valsalva manoeuvre (closed-glottis breath-holding under exertion) raises acute blood pressure sharply, which is the opposite of what you want. Breathe steadily throughout each hold.
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## How to start safely if you’re over 50
Isometric exercise is generally well-tolerated for adults over 50. The intensity is sub-maximal, the joint stays still, and the risk of falling or injuring yourself mid-rep is lower than with most other exercise modalities.
That said, a few groups should speak to a clinician before starting a structured isometric programme:
* **If you’re on prescribed blood pressure medication.** Adding any new exercise programme to an existing antihypertensive regimen warrants a quick conversation with your GP, particularly if your medication is being adjusted. Combining lifestyle interventions with medication can sometimes lower blood pressure further than either alone, which is useful but worth knowing.
* **If you have known cardiovascular disease or have had a cardiac event.** Isometric work is not contraindicated in stable cardiovascular disease, but the starting intensity, the breathing technique, and the supervision level matter more. Your GP or cardiologist can guide the safe entry point.
* **If you have glaucoma.** Sustained isometric contraction can transiently raise intraocular pressure. People with diagnosed glaucoma have historically been advised to avoid prolonged breath-held isometric work for this reason.
* **If you’re pregnant or recently postpartum.** Standard pregnancy exercise modifications apply; isometric work is generally fine in moderation but the protocol above is built for non-pregnant adults.
The general rule for everyone else: start with shorter holds (30 to 60 seconds), shallower wall-sit angles, or lower grip intensity, and build to the full protocol over 2 to 4 weeks. You shouldn’t finish a session feeling exhausted. You should finish feeling like the muscle worked but you could go again.
⚠
**Stop and seek medical attention if:** you experience chest pain, sudden severe headache, dizziness, visual disturbance, or unusual breathlessness during or shortly after a session. None of these are typical isometric responses and they warrant a same-day call to NHS 111 or A&E rather than a wait-and-see approach.
## Where this fits with aerobic and resistance work
Isometric exercise belongs alongside the rest of your movement, as an addition rather than a swap-out.
The current UK guideline for adults remains 150 minutes per week of moderate aerobic activity (walking, cycling, gardening) plus two sessions of muscle-strengthening work. Isometric exercise can sit alongside that programme without conflict. Three 11-minute isometric sessions a week add roughly 35 minutes of weekly movement on top of the existing target.
The combination is increasingly well-evidenced for cardiovascular outcomes in adults over 50. A separate 12-week trial in 35 hypertensive women with an average age of 68 combined resistance training with dietary nitrate support and reported an 8.5% systolic blood pressure drop alongside a 35% rise in nitric oxide metabolites. The pieces stack.
If you do nothing else: add three short isometric sessions a week to whatever you already do. If you do more: keep walking, keep the strength work, eat the leafy greens, sleep properly, and the small daily inputs add up over months rather than days.
[📊
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Perimenopause and Blood Pressure: The Nitric Oxide Link](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/perimenopause-and-blood-pressure-nitric-oxide)
## Where Daily Beets fits
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It works on the same downstream system that isometric exercise appears to act on, supporting normal nitric oxide signalling and endothelial function as part of a balanced diet. It is designed to sit alongside lifestyle interventions, not replace them. Three short isometric sessions a week plus a daily input of dietary nitrate is the kind of compound effect the trials suggest matters most.
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## Frequently asked questions
Do wall sits really lower blood pressure?
The 2023 BJSM meta-analysis of 270 randomised trials and 15,827 participants found that isometric exercise (including wall sits) produced the largest average reductions in resting blood pressure of any exercise modality studied. The average drop was around 8 mmHg systolic and 4 mmHg diastolic. The protocol that produced those numbers was 4 holds of 2 minutes, 3 times per week, for 8 to 12 weeks.
How often should I do isometric exercises for blood pressure?
Three sessions per week on non-consecutive days is the frequency used in most isometric blood pressure trials. Each session is 4 holds of 2 minutes with 1 minute of rest between, totalling around 11 minutes. The trials didn’t see additional benefit from daily training, so three sessions a week is the evidence-based dose.
How long until isometric exercise starts to lower blood pressure?
Most isometric trials run for 8 to 12 weeks, which is roughly the window required to see measurable changes in resting blood pressure. Some people notice smaller shifts in 4 to 6 weeks; others take the full 12. Home monitoring across the period helps: a weekly average of paired morning and evening readings is far more informative than checking sporadically and hoping for a clear answer.
Are isometric exercises safe for over 60s?
Generally yes, and the trials in the BJSM meta-analysis included participants well into their 70s. The intensity is sub-maximal, the joints don’t move, and the risk of falls or acute injury is lower than for most other exercise modalities. People on blood pressure medication, with known cardiovascular disease, or with diagnosed glaucoma should speak to their GP before starting a structured isometric programme. Breath-holding during the holds is the main thing to avoid; breathe normally throughout.
Are isometric hand grip exercises as effective as wall sits?
The effect sizes are similar across both modalities, though wall sits tend to produce slightly larger effects because they recruit more muscle mass. Isometric hand grip exercise has the longest research history of any isometric protocol for BP and is the easier of the two to do anywhere. A practical version: alternate the two across the week, or pick whichever you’ll actually keep doing for 12 weeks.
Can isometric exercise replace blood pressure medication?
No, it is not a replacement. Even though the effect size in the BJSM meta-analysis is in the same range as a first-line antihypertensive, lifestyle interventions and prescribed medication serve different roles in the management plan. Do not stop or reduce blood pressure medication on your own. Add the isometric work to your existing routine, bring your home readings to your next GP review, and any decisions about prescription changes belong with your clinician.
## The bottom line
The 2023 BJSM meta-analysis put isometric exercise at the top of the BP-lowering exercise ranking. Wall sits and hand grips, three times a week, four holds of two minutes, for 8 to 12 weeks. Average drop around 8 mmHg systolic in the trials.
That isn’t a magic protocol. Aerobic and resistance work both still belong in the week, and so does sleep, dietary nitrate, less salt from the processed end of the shop, and home monitoring. Isometric work earns a slot alongside the rest of the routine, rather than replacing any of it.
Three times a week. Eleven minutes a session. Not glamorous. Probably useful.
## Continue Learning
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Natural Approaches
How to Lower Blood Pressure Naturally: A UK Guide](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/how-to-lower-blood-pressure-naturally)
[📋
Cornerstone
How to Measure Blood Pressure Correctly at Home](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/how-to-measure-blood-pressure-correctly-at-home)
[🧬
Women’s Health
Perimenopause and Blood Pressure: The Nitric Oxide Link](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/perimenopause-and-blood-pressure-nitric-oxide)
[📊
Mechanism
Nitric Oxide Explained: A Simple Guide](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/nitric-oxide-explained-a-simple-guide-to-circulation-and-vascular-health)
---
**Medically reviewed by Dr Nouman Kazmi**
Consultant Cardiologist (MBBS, FCPS). Dr Kazmi reviews clinical content on the Matter Heart Health Resource Centre for accuracy.
[View Dr Kazmi’s profile →](https://getmatter.co/pages/matter-cardiologist-dr-syed-nouman-kazmi)
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## References
1. Edwards JJ et al. Exercise training and resting blood pressure: a large-scale pairwise and network meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. *British Journal of Sports Medicine*. 2023;57(20):1317–1326.
2. Inder JD et al. Isometric exercise training for blood pressure management: a systematic review and meta-analysis to optimise benefit. *Hypertension Research*. 2016;39(2):88–94.
3. Carlson DJ et al. Isometric exercise training for blood pressure management: a systematic review and meta-analysis. *Mayo Clinic Proceedings*. 2014;89(3):327–334.
4. NICE. Hypertension in adults: diagnosis and management (NG136). Available at: [nice.org.uk/guidance/ng136](https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng136)
5. NHS. Physical activity guidelines for adults. Available at: [nhs.uk/live-well/exercise](https://www.nhs.uk/live-well/exercise/)
6. British Heart Foundation. Exercise and the heart: practical guidance. Available at: [bhf.org.uk](https://www.bhf.org.uk/)
7. Smart NA et al. Effects of isometric resistance training on resting blood pressure: individual participant data meta-analysis. *Journal of Hypertension*. 2019;37(10):1927–1938.
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Tags: blood pressure, exercise, isometric, P4, UK-specific, wall sits
Source: https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/isometric-exercises-blood-pressure
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