Heightened functional neural activation to psychological stress covaries with exaggerated blood pressure reactivity

被引:81
作者
Gianaros, Peter J.
Jennings, J. Richard
Sheu, Lei K.
Derbyshire, Stuart W. G.
Matthews, Karen A.
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Psychiat, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
[2] Univ Birmingham, Sch Psychol, Birmingham, W Midlands, England
关键词
blood pressure; cardiovascular reactivity; cerebellum; cingulate; insula; orbitofrontal cortex; psychological stress;
D O I
10.1161/01.HYP.0000250984.14992.64
中图分类号
R6 [外科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100210 ;
摘要
Individuals who show exaggerated blood pressure reactions to psychological stressors are at increased risk for hypertension, atherosclerosis, and stroke. We tested whether individuals who show exaggerated stressor-induced blood pressure reactivity also show heightened stressor-induced neural activation in brain areas involved in controlling the cardiovascular system. In a functional MRI study, 46 postmenopausal women ( mean age: 68.04; SD: 1.35 years) performed a standardized Stroop color-word interference task that served as a stressor to increase blood pressure. Across individuals, a larger task-induced rise in blood pressure covaried with heightened and correlated patterns of activation in brain areas implicated previously in stress-related cardiovascular control: the perigenual and posterior cingulate cortex, bilateral prefrontal cortex, anterior insula, and cerebellum. Entered as a set in hierarchical regression analyses, activation values in these brain areas uniquely predicted the magnitude of task-induced changes in systolic (Delta R-2 = 0.54; P < 0.001) and diastolic (Delta R-2 =0.27; P < 0.05) blood pressure after statistical control for task accuracy and subjective reports of task stress. Heightened stressor-induced activation of cingulate, prefrontal, insular, and cerebellar brain areas may represent a functional neural phenotype that characterizes individuals who are prone to show exaggerated cardiovascular reactivity.
引用
收藏
页码:134 / 140
页数:7
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