Effects of whole-body vibration exercise training on cardiovascular markers in young adults: a meta-analysis

Okuneye, Rafiu Olaolawa and Taiwo, Abdulkareem Babatunde and Apalara, Fatai Akinola and Dansu, Tony and Oforka, Okechukwu Kingsley and Ogar, Emmanuel Ekawu and Abdullah, Yahaya and Dauda-Olajide, Rofiat and Ajoseh, Isaiah Whenayon (2026) Effects of whole-body vibration exercise training on cardiovascular markers in young adults: a meta-analysis. Malaysian Journal of Sport Science and Recreation (MJSSR), 22 (1). pp. 176-189. ISSN 1823-3198

Official URL: https://journal.uitm.edu.my/ojs/index.php/MJSSR

Identification Number (DOI): 10.24191/mjssr.v22i1.8434

Abstract

The study evaluates the effects of whole-body vibration (WBV) exercise training on key cardiovascular markers, specifically systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), resting heart rate (HR), and pulse-wave velocity (PWV) in healthy young adults. We conducted a systematic search of PubMed, Embase, Cochrane CENTRAL, Web of Science, and Google Scholar from January 2015 through June 1, 2025. Randomised controlled trials comparing WBV (any modality, 20–40 Hz) versus control (no exercise or sham vibration) in participants aged 18–40 years were eligible. Data extraction and study quality assessment (using the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2.0 tool) were performed independently by two reviewers. Pooled weighted mean differences (WMDs) were calculated using a DerSimonian–Laird random‐effects model. I² quantified heterogeneity, and the overall risk of bias was summarised across studies. Twenty RCTs (n = 846 participants) met the inclusion criteria. Compared with control, WBV produced significant reductions in: SBP: WMD = −7.0 mmHg (95 % CI, −9.5 to −4.5; p < 0.001; I² = 42 %), DBP: WMD = −1.8 mmHg (95 % CI, −3.0 to −0.2; p = 0.003; I² = 35 %), HR: WMD = −2.2 bpm (95 % CI, −3.6 to −0.8; p = 0.001; I² = 28 %), PWV: WMD = −0.9 m/s (95 % CI, −1.2 to −0.6; p < 0.001; I² = 48 %). Subgroup analyses indicated larger SBP and DBP reductions in overweight or metabolic syndrome cohorts and trials using vibration ≥ 30 Hz. Overall risk of bias was moderate: most studies had “some concerns” due to lack of participant blinding or incomplete outcome data. WBV training in young adults yields clinically meaningful improvements in SBP, DBP, HR, and arterial stiffness, with low‐to‐moderate heterogeneity (I² = 28–48 %) and generally moderate risk of bias. Future long‐term, higher‐powered RCTs are needed to confirm these findings and determine optimal vibration parameters.

Metadata

Item Type: Article
Creators:
Creators
Email / ID Num.
Okuneye, Rafiu Olaolawa
UNSPECIFIED
Taiwo, Abdulkareem Babatunde
UNSPECIFIED
Apalara, Fatai Akinola
UNSPECIFIED
Dansu, Tony
UNSPECIFIED
Oforka, Okechukwu Kingsley
UNSPECIFIED
Ogar, Emmanuel Ekawu
UNSPECIFIED
Abdullah, Yahaya
UNSPECIFIED
Dauda-Olajide, Rofiat
UNSPECIFIED
Ajoseh, Isaiah Whenayon
UNSPECIFIED
Subjects: Q Science > QP Physiology
R Medicine > RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology > Physical medicine. Physical therapy. Including massage, exercise, occupational therapy, hydrotherapy, phototherapy, radiotherapy, thermotherapy, electrotherapy
Divisions: Universiti Teknologi MARA, Shah Alam > Faculty of Sport Science and Recreation
Journal or Publication Title: Malaysian Journal of Sport Science and Recreation (MJSSR)
UiTM Journal Collections: UiTM Journals > Malaysian Journal of Sport Science and Recreation (MJSSR)
ISSN: 1823-3198
Volume: 22
Number: 1
Page Range: pp. 176-189
Keywords: Whole-body vibration exercise, Blood pressure, Arterial stiffness, Heart rate, Meta-analysis
Date: 15 March 2026
URI: https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/137750
Edit Item
Edit Item

Download

[thumbnail of 137750.pdf] Text
137750.pdf

Download (501kB)

ID Number

137750

Indexing

Altmetric
PlumX
Dimensions

Statistic

Statistic details