Literature DB >> 15160975

Coronary heart disease, chronic inflammation, and pathogenic social hierarchy: a biological limit to possible reductions in morbidity and mortality.

Rodrick Wallace1, Deborah Wallace, Robert G Wallace.   

Abstract

We suggest that a particular form of social hierarchy, which we characterize as "pathogenic", can, from the earliest stages of life, exert a formal analog to evolutionary selection pressure, literally writing a permanent developmental image of itself upon immune function as chronic vascular inflammation and its consequences. The staged nature of resulting disease emerges "naturally" as a rough analog to punctuated equilibrium in evolutionary theory, although selection pressure is a passive filter rather than an active agent, like structured psychosocial stress. Exposure differs according to the social constructs of race, class, and ethnicity, accounting in large measure for observed population-level differences in rates of coronary heart disease across industrialized societies. American Apartheid, which enmeshes both majority and minority communities in a social construct of pathogenic hierarchy, appears to present a severe biological limit to continuing declines in coronary heart disease for powerful as well as subordinate subgroups: "Culture"--to use the words of the evolutionary anthropologist Robert Boyd--"is as much a part of human biology as the enamel on our teeth".

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Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15160975      PMCID: PMC2640658     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc        ISSN: 0027-9684            Impact factor:   1.798


  41 in total

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4.  Socioeconomic determinants of health: community marginalisation and the diffusion of disease and disorder in the United States.

Authors:  R Wallace; D Wallace
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5.  Plasma leptin levels are increased in survivors of acute sepsis: associated loss of diurnal rhythm, in cortisol and leptin secretion.

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Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  1998-01       Impact factor: 5.958

Review 6.  Human C-reactive protein: expression, structure, and function.

Authors:  J E Volanakis
Journal:  Mol Immunol       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 4.407

7.  Disparities in premature coronary heart disease mortality by region and urbanicity among black and white adults ages 35-64, 1985-1995.

Authors:  E Barnett; J Halverson
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  2000 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.792

8.  Excess mortality in Harlem.

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9.  Leptin modulates the T-cell immune response and reverses starvation-induced immunosuppression.

Authors:  G M Lord; G Matarese; J K Howard; R J Baker; S R Bloom; R I Lechler
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10.  Low job control and risk of coronary heart disease in Whitehall II (prospective cohort) study.

Authors:  H Bosma; M G Marmot; H Hemingway; A C Nicholson; E Brunner; S A Stansfeld
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1997-02-22
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  3 in total

Review 1.  Emotion and biological health: the socio-cultural moderation.

Authors:  Shinobu Kitayama; Jiyoung Park
Journal:  Curr Opin Psychol       Date:  2017-07-05

2.  Everyday Discrimination Prospectively Predicts Inflammation Across 7-Years in Racially Diverse Midlife Women: Study of Women's Health Across the Nation.

Authors:  Danielle L Beatty; Karen A Matthews; Joyce T Bromberger; Charlotte Brown
Journal:  J Soc Issues       Date:  2014-06-01

Review 3.  The use of racial, ethnic, and ancestral categories in human genetics research.

Authors: 
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2005-08-29       Impact factor: 11.025

  3 in total

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