| Literature DB >> 20948935 |
Stephen J Lepore1, Bhaskar Shejwal, Bang Hyun Kim, Gary W Evans.
Abstract
The present study builds on prior research that has examined the association between children's chronic exposure to community noise and resting blood pressure and blood pressure dysregulation during exposure to acute stressors. A novel contribution of the study is that it examines how chronic noise exposure relates to blood pressure responses during exposure to both noise and non-noise acute stressors. The acute noise stressor was recorded street noise and the non-noise stressor was mental arithmetic. The sample consisted of 189 3rd and 6th grade children (51.9% percent boys; 52.9% 3rd graders) from a noisy (n = 95) or relatively quiet (n = 94) public school in the city of Pune, India. There were no statistically significant differences between chronic noise levels and resting blood pressure levels. However, relative to quiet-school children, noisy-school children had significantly lower increases in blood pressure when exposed to either an acute noise or non-noise stressor. This finding suggests that chronic noise exposure may result in hypo-reactivity to a variety of stressors and not just habituation to noise stressors.Entities:
Keywords: blood pressure; habituation; noise; reactivity; stress
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20948935 PMCID: PMC2954556 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph7093457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Resting systolic and diastolic blood pressure among children in the quiet versus noisy elementary school (n = 189).
| Systolic | 94.63 | 2.00 | 92.22 | 2.01 | 0.561,183 | 0.452 |
| Diastolic | 61.71 | 1.60 | 56.81 | 1.62 | 3.651,183 | 0.058 |
Means adjusted for sex, age, BMI, and testing problems.
Figure 1.Systolic 1 and diastolic 2 blood pressure reactivity during acute math and noise stressors among children in the quiet versus noisy elementary school (n = 189).
1 Means adjusted for sex, age, BMI, testing problems, and resting systolic blood pressure.
2 Means adjusted for sex, age, BMI, testing problems, and resting diastolic blood pressure.