| Literature DB >> 11763829 |
R H Schneider1, A Castillo-Richmond, C N Alexander, H Myers, V Kaushik, C Aranguri, K Norris, C Haney, M Rainforth, R Calderon, S Nidich.
Abstract
African Americans experience higher morbidity and mortality than Whites do as a result of hypertension and associated cardiovascular disease. Chronic psychosocial stress has been considered an important contributing factor to these high rates. The authors describe the rationale and design for a planned randomized controlled trial comparing Transcendental Meditation, a stress-reduction technique, with lifestyle education in the treatment of hypertension and hypertensive heart disease in urban African Americans. They pretested 170 men and women aged 20 to 70 years over a 3-session baseline period, with posttests at 6 months. Outcomes included clinic and ambulatory blood pressure, quality of life, left ventricular mass measured by M-mode echocardiography, left ventricular diastolic function measured by Doppler, and carotid atherosclerosis measured by beta-mode ultrasound. This trial was designed to evaluate the hypothesis that a selected stress reduction technique is effective in reducing hypertension and hypertensive heart disease in African Americans.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2001 PMID: 11763829 DOI: 10.1080/08964280109595775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Med ISSN: 0896-4289 Impact factor: 3.104