| Literature DB >> 12411471 |
Peter J Gianaros1, Maria E Bleil, Matthew F Muldoon, J Richard Jennings, Kim Sutton-Tyrrell, Jeanne M McCaffery, Stephen B Manuck.
Abstract
Exaggerated cardiovascular reactivity to behavioral challenges among otherwise healthy individuals has been associated with carotid atherosclerosis. We evaluated whether a similar relationship exists among hypertensives, who are at a heightened atherosclerotic risk. Untreated, hypertensive men (n=251; age range, 40 to 70 years; 197 white, 54 black) completed a standardized battery of behavioral challenges while their blood pressure responses to the battery were measured. Mean and maximum carotid intima-media thickness and the occurrence of carotid plaques were subsequently determined using B-mode ultrasonography. Although greater systolic and diastolic responses to the battery were associated with greater mean and maximum intima-media thickness in univariate analyses (P<0.01), only diastolic reactivity showed a unique association with mean and maximum carotid intima-media thickness after multivariate adjustment for age, race, socioeconomic status, smoking and alcohol use, body mass index, lipid profile, glucose and insulin concentrations, and resting blood pressure (P<0.05). Carotid plaque occurrence was associated with greater systolic reactivity (P=0.05) and was marginally associated with greater diastolic reactivity (P=0.07) in univariate analyses, but neither systolic nor diastolic reactivity was uniquely associated with the presence of carotid plaques after multivariate risk-factor adjustment. Among hypertensives, exaggerated behaviorally evoked cardiovascular reactivity appears to be uniquely associated with greater carotid intima-media thickness but not with carotid plaque occurrence.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12411471 PMCID: PMC4896076 DOI: 10.1161/01.hyp.0000035707.57492.eb
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertension ISSN: 0194-911X Impact factor: 10.190