Blood pressure, gender, and parental hypertension are factors in baseline and poststress pain sensitivity in normotensive adults

被引:50
作者
Bragdon, EE
Light, KC
Girdler, SS
Maixner, W
机构
[1] UNIV N CAROLINA, DEPT PSYCHOL, STRESS & HLTH RES PROGRAM, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599 USA
[2] UNIV N CAROLINA, DEPT PSYCHIAT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599 USA
[3] UNIV N CAROLINA, DENT RES CTR, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599 USA
关键词
analgesia; blood pressure; cardiac index; gender; parental hypertension; stress;
D O I
10.1207/s15327558ijbm0401_2
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
We studied 38 men and 36 women to learn whether a brief speech stressor reduced normotensive humans' thermal pain sensitivity, whether baseline and poststress pain threshold and tolerance varied with blood pressure (BP) and hemodynamic measures, and whether these relations differed by gender and parental hypertension (PH). PH-women with low resting BPs had lower baseline pain tolerance than did ail other groups tps <.05), and this group alone exhibited stress-induced analgesia (p =.008). In women, pre- and poststress pain tolerance varied directly with rest and stress BP tps <.05). In men, BP and pain measures were not related, but high cardiac index during stress was associated with low baseline pain tolerance (p <.01). The present findings support the hypothesis that pain sensitivity and cardiac stress response share a common mechanism, but they yield little support for the hypothesis that analgesic responses to acute stress contribute to hypertension etiology via an instrumental learning process.
引用
收藏
页码:17 / 38
页数:22
相关论文
共 65 条
[31]   SEX-DIFFERENCES IN PAIN AND THERMAL SENSITIVITY - THE ROLE OF BODY SIZE [J].
LAUTENBACHER, S ;
STRIAN, F .
PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 1991, 50 (02) :179-183
[32]   FACTORS INFLUENCING THE ALTERED PAIN PERCEPTION IN THE SPONTANEOUSLY HYPERTENSIVE RAT [J].
MAIXNER, W ;
TOUW, KB ;
BRODY, MJ ;
GEBHART, GF ;
LONG, JP .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1982, 237 (01) :137-145
[33]   GENDER DIFFERENCES IN PAIN AND CARDIOVASCULAR-RESPONSES TO FOREARM ISCHEMIA [J].
MAIXNER, W ;
HUMPHREY, C .
CLINICAL JOURNAL OF PAIN, 1993, 9 (01) :16-25
[34]   THE EFFECTS OF INDUCED ANXIETY ON PAIN PERCEPTION - A SIGNAL-DETECTION ANALYSIS [J].
MALOW, RM .
PAIN, 1981, 11 (03) :397-405
[35]   BEHAVIORALLY-INDUCED CARDIOVASCULAR REACTIVITY AMONG SONS OF REPORTED HYPERTENSIVE AND NORMOTENSIVE PARENTS [J].
MANUCK, SB ;
GIORDANI, B ;
MCQUAID, KJ ;
GARRITY, SJ .
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOMATIC RESEARCH, 1981, 25 (04) :261-269
[36]   DO ENDOGENOUS OPIOIDS MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BLOOD-PRESSURE AND PAIN SENSITIVITY IN NORMOTENSIVES [J].
MCCUBBIN, JA ;
BRUEHL, S .
PAIN, 1994, 57 (01) :63-67
[37]   ENDOGENOUS OPIATE PEPTIDES, STRESS REACTIVITY, AND RISK FOR HYPERTENSION [J].
MCCUBBIN, JA ;
SURWIT, RS ;
WILLIAMS, RB .
HYPERTENSION, 1985, 7 (05) :808-811
[38]   QUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENT OF THERMAL AND PAIN SENSITIVITY [J].
MEH, D ;
DENISLIC, M .
JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1994, 127 (02) :164-169
[39]   SEX-DIFFERENCES IN THE ANTAGONISM OF SWIM STRESS-INDUCED ANALGESIA - EFFECTS OF GONADECTOMY AND ESTROGEN REPLACEMENT [J].
MOGIL, JS ;
STERNBERG, WF ;
KEST, B ;
MAREK, P ;
LIEBESKIND, JC .
PAIN, 1993, 53 (01) :17-25
[40]   ASSOCIATION BETWEEN HYPOALGESIA AND HYPERTENSION IN RATS AFTER SHORT-TERM ISOLATION [J].
NARANJO, JR ;
FUENTES, JA .
NEUROPHARMACOLOGY, 1985, 24 (02) :167-171