| More on Stress and the Heart | |||||||||||||||||
| There is an effect, but we don't completely understand it | |||||||||||||||||
Scientists continue to study the complex relationships between stress and the heart. Several studies published in the September/October 2002 issue of Psychosomatic Medicine provide new insight into the complex relationships between stress and heart disease. Two of the studies looked at the idea that stress may contribute to heart disease, while the third looked at stress that is caused by a heart attack. The first two studies summarized here provide further evidence that stress can be a factor in heart disease risk. The third looks at the stress that is caused by a heart attack. Click on the titles for more information. Laura M. Glynn, Ph.D. and her colleagues performed two studies finding that current emotional stressors and ruminating about past stressors both increase blood pressure. When asked to ruminate on a previously performed emotional task, participants' blood pressure rose to a similar level as when they were actually performing the task. In contrast, thinking back to a physical task (that previously caused an increase in blood pressure) did not raise subjects' blood pressure. Reference: Psychological distress,
especially anger, anxiety and depression, may be good predictors of high
blood pressure. Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh and the
University of British Columbia reviewed the results of 15 studies published
between 1972 and 2000 that assessed the link between stress and
hypertension. The studies measured subjects' levels of anger, anxiety,
depression, defensiveness, social support, hopelessness and other
psychological factors, and then looked at whether the subjects later
developed high blood pressure. Looking at all of the studies, the
researchers assert that the risk of developing hypertension was about 8
percent higher among people who had high psychological distress than among
people who had low psychological distress. People who cope with the aftermath of a heart attack with a repressive coping style - ignoring their anxiety or diverting their attention away - may adjust better. The repressive study participants had lower rates of acute stress disorders than highly anxious study participants did, but higher rates than low-anxiety study participants did. Reference:
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