Psychosocial demands and ambulatory blood pressure: a field assessment approach

被引:78
作者
Kamarck, TW
Janicki, DL
Shiffman, S
Polk, DE
Muldoon, MF
Liebenauer, LL
Schwartz, JE
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Psychol, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA
[2] SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794 USA
[3] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Med, Pittsburgh, PA USA
关键词
ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; psychological stress; cardiovascular diseases; heart diseases; ecological momentary assessment;
D O I
10.1016/S0031-9384(02)00921-6
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) has been shown to have independent prognostic value, over and beyond the effects of clinic blood pressure (CBP) measures. We have examined the role of psychosocial demands in understanding ABP, using an electronic diary to measure ongoing experience in the field at the time of each blood pressure reading (ecological momentary assessment). In our previous work, several psychosocial factors were shown to be associated, within-person, with acute fluctuations in ABP in a healthy adult sample. Here, we replicate these findings in a new sample, and we also examine associations of the same variables with mean ABP (between-person) over a 6-day. period. Five measures assumed to be markers of psychosocial demands (negative affect, arousal, task demand, decisional control, and social conflict) were shown here to be independently associated with ABP fluctuations during daily life, after adjustment for posture, activity, and substance use. Two of these, measures of task demand and decisional control, were also associated with mean ambulatory systolic blood pressure (SBP), and these latter associations persisted after controlling for CBR These results support the possibility that psychosocial factors may account for some of the unique predictive value associated with ABP, and they support the value of these field assessment methods. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:699 / 704
页数:6
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]  
Cohen J., 1983, APPL MULTIPLE REGRES, DOI [10.1002/0471264385.wei0219, DOI 10.1002/0471264385.WEI0219]
[2]   LEFT-VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY IN PATIENTS WITH HYPERTENSION - IMPORTANCE OF BLOOD-PRESSURE RESPONSE TO REGULARLY RECURRING STRESS [J].
DEVEREUX, RB ;
PICKERING, TG ;
HARSHFIELD, GA ;
KLEINERT, HD ;
DENBY, L ;
CLARK, L ;
PREGIBON, D ;
JASON, M ;
KLEINER, B ;
BORER, JS ;
LARAGH, JH .
CIRCULATION, 1983, 68 (03) :470-476
[3]  
Goodie, 1996, Blood Press Monit, V1, P135
[4]   Effects of task strain, social conflict, and emotional activation on ambulatory cardiovascular activity: Daily life consequences of recurring stress in a multiethnic adult sample [J].
Kamarck, TW ;
Shiffman, SM ;
Smithline, L ;
Goodie, JL ;
Paty, JA ;
Gnys, M ;
Jong, JYK .
HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 1998, 17 (01) :17-29
[5]   The incremental value of ambulatory blood pressure persists after controlling for methodological confounds: associations with carotid atherosclerosis in a healthy sample [J].
Kamarck, TW ;
Polk, DE ;
Sutton-Tyrrell, K ;
Muldoon, MF .
JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2002, 20 (08) :1535-1541
[6]  
Kamarck TW, 1998, PERSP BEH M, P163
[7]  
MANUCK SB, 1991, STRESS COP, P51
[8]   HUMAN BLOOD-PRESSURE DETERMINATION BY SPHYGMOMANOMETRY [J].
PERLOFF, D ;
GRIM, C ;
FLACK, J ;
FROHLICH, ED ;
HILL, M ;
MCDONALD, M ;
MORGENSTERN, BZ .
CIRCULATION, 1993, 88 (05) :2460-2470
[9]   A VBR rate control algorithm for MPEG-2 video coders with perceptually adaptive quantisation and traffic shaping [J].
Pickering, MR ;
Arnold, JF ;
Cavenor, MC .
SIGNAL PROCESSING-IMAGE COMMUNICATION, 1997, 11 (01) :1-19
[10]   Hostility explains some of the discrepancy between daytime ambulatory and clinic blood pressures [J].
Polk, DE ;
Kamarck, TW ;
Shiffman, S .
HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2002, 21 (02) :202-206