| Literature DB >> 24743684 |
N Bergmann1, F Gyntelberg2, J Faber3.
Abstract
Chronic psychosocial stress has been proposed as a risk factor for the development of the metabolic syndrome (MES). This review gives a systematic overview of prospective cohort studies investigating chronic psychosocial stress as a risk factor for incident MES and the individual elements of MES. Thirty-nine studies were included. An association between chronic psychosocial stress and the development of MES was generally supported. Regarding the four elements of MES: i) weight gain: the prospective studies supported etiological roles for relationship stress, perceived stress, and distress, while the studies on work-related stress (WS) showed conflicting results; ii) dyslipidemi: too few studies on psychosocial stress as a risk factor for dyslipidemia were available to draw a conclusion; however, a trend toward a positive association was present; iii) type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2): prospective studies supported perceived stress and distress as risk factors for the development of DM2 among men, but not among women, while WS was generally not supported as a risk factor among neither men nor women; iv) hypertension: marital stress and perceived stress might have an influence on blood pressure (BP), while no association was found regarding distress. Evaluating WS the results were equivocal and indicated that different types of WS affected the BP differently between men and women. In conclusion, a longitudinal association between chronic psychosocial stress and the development of MES seems present. However, the number of studies with sufficient quality is limited and the design of the studies is substantially heterogeneous.Entities:
Keywords: adiposity; dyslipidemia; hypertension; job stress; metabolic syndrome; psychological stress; type 2 diabetes mellitus
Year: 2014 PMID: 24743684 PMCID: PMC4025474 DOI: 10.1530/EC-14-0031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocr Connect ISSN: 2049-3614 Impact factor: 3.335
Box 1Clinical criteria for the metabolic syndrome.
Stress and the metabolic syndrome, prospective cohort studies.
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| 4 years cohort | 216 couples | Six questions on marital adjustment | MES as defined by the NCEP ATP III | Gender, age, income, current and previous smoking, alcohol use, depressive symptoms, physical activity, and baseline MES criterias | Partner reported marital adjustment (higher score, poorer marital adjustment) | Men: OR (95% CI), 1.02 (0.39–2.68) |
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| The ELSA study | Actor reported marital adjustment | Men: OR (95% CI), 0.84 (0.21–3.41) | |||||
| Women: OR (95% CI): 0.37 (0.83–1.67) | |||||||
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| 5 years cohort | 1408 men and 1558 women | Job Strain Q | MES as defined by the NCEP ATP III | Age, race, physical activity, smoking status, education, family income, daily alcohol consumption, and depression score | High job strain vs low job strain | Men: HR (95% CI), 1.8 (0.9–3.6) |
| The CARDIA study |
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| 6.4 years cohort | 466 men and women | General health Q | MES as defined by NCEP ATP III | Age, gender, psychological distress, socio-economic status, smoking status, use of alcohol, leisure time physical activity, hsCRP, and General health Q12 | High psychological distress vs low psychological distress |
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| A study cohort of middle aged subjects from Finland | |||||||
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| 18 years cohort | 4398 men and 1923 women | Justice at work scale | MES as defined by NCEP ATP III | Age, ethnicity, and employment grade | Low justice at work vs high justice at work |
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| The Whitehall II study cohort | Women: HR (95% CI), 0.88 (0.67–1.17) | ||||||
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| 15 years cohort | 523 women | Perceived stress scale | MES as defined by WHO, NCEP ATP III, and IDF | Age, physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, use of HRT, and level of education | Perceived stress vs no perceived stress |
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| The Healthy Women Study Cohort | Women: OR (95% CI), 1.19 (0.96–1.47) | ||||||
| Women: OR (95% CI), 1.11 (0.90–1.36) | |||||||
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| 14 years cohort | 10 308 men and women | Job demand control Q | MES as defined by NCEP ATP III | Age, employment grade, and health behaviours | Greater than or equal to three exposures of job strain vs no exposure of job strain |
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| The Whitehall II study cohort | |||||||
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| 11.5 years cohort | 413 women | Study specific seven-item measure of marital quality | MES as defined by NCEP ATP III | Age, baseline metabolic syndrome, length of follow-up, race, education, smoking history, hormone use, physical activity, alcohol consumption, depression, anxiety, and social support | Marital dissatisfied vs marital satisfied |
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Bold indicates significant results. OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test; CVD, cardiovascular disease; FPG, fasting plasma glucose; FBG, fasting blood glucose; PG, plasma glucose.
Stress and adiposity, prospective cohort studies.
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| 5–7 years cohort | 7332 men and women | Job content Q | Weight gain | Age, baseline weight, alcohol consumption, smoking, physical exercise, limiting longstanding illness, common mental disorders, and employment status at the follow-up | Low job strain vs high job strain | Men: OR (95% CI), 1.07 (0.70–1.63) |
| The Helsinki Health Study cohort | Women: OR (95% CI), 1.15 (0.95–1.38) | ||||||
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| 3 years cohort | 136 men and 3647 women | COPSO Q | BMI gain | Analyses on role conflicts were adjusted for: age, cohabitation, type of work position, seniority, and physical work demands. No adjustments were made regarding meaning of work | Meaning of work | Men: OR (95% CI), 1.1 (0.75–1.62) |
| The COPSOQ-study | Women: OR (95% CI), 1.02 (0.95–1.09) | ||||||
| BMI loss |
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| Women: OR (95% CI), 1.07 (0.97–1.19) | |||||||
| BMI gain | Role conflicts | Men: OR (95% CI), 1.00 (0.74–1.35) | |||||
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| BMI loss | Men: OR (95% CI), 0.84 (0.54–1.31) | ||||||
| Women: OR (95% CI), 1.02 (0.93–1.11) | |||||||
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| 2 years cohort | 3224 men and women | COPSO Q | Change in BMI | Age, sex, education, personal annual income, leadership responsibilities of other employees, shiftwork, number of stressful life events in the last 6 months, neuroticism and extraversion, and loneliness | Higher demand |
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| The PRISME study | Lower decision latitude | 0.16 (−0.14 to 0.45) | |||||
| Lower social support | −0.17 (−0.64 to 0.30) | ||||||
| Higher effort–reward imbalance | −0.003 (−0.30 to 0.24) | ||||||
| 0.11 (−0.59 to 0.80) | |||||||
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| 11.2 years cohort | 3703 men and women | Close person Q | >10% increase in BMI | Gender, age, marital status, ethnicity, baseline BMI, employment grade, smoking status, moderate physical activity, vigorous physical activity, daily fruit and vegetable consumption, and common mental disorder | Per one-unit increase in the negative aspects score |
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| The Whitehall II study cohort | 3224 men and women | >10% increase in waist circumference (WC) | Per one-unit increase in the negative aspects score |
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| 6.4 years cohort | 466 men and women | General health Q | WC >102 cm in men or >88 cm in women | Baseline value of psychological distress | High psychological distress vs low psychological distress |
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| A study cohort of middle aged subjects from Finland | |||||||
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| 2 years cohort | 52 men and 20 women | Job demand control Q | Change in BMI | Age, gender, baseline BMI, and education | Job-demand control imbalance | No significant association |
| A cohort of employees from a Swiss service provider | Effort–reward imbalance Q | Effort–rewards imbalance | No significant association | ||||
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| 4 years cohort | 1670 men and women | Kessler 6 scale on psychological distress | Change in BMI | Age, sex, country of birth, marital status, income, alcohol consumption, and smoking | Low psychological distress vs high psychological distress | Decreased BMI: OR (95% CI), 1.08 (0.69–1.70) |
| The longitudinal study of Australian Children cohort |
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| 18 years cohort | 4398 men and 1923 women | Justice at work Q | WC >120 cm in men or >88 cm in women | Age, ethnicity, and employment grade | Low justice at work vs high justice at work |
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| The Whitehall II study cohort |
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| 13 years cohort | 416 men and 757 women | Perceived stress scale | Change in BMI | Stress, age, baseline BMI, smoking, education, occupation, and financial strain | Highest tertile of perceived stress vs lowest tertile of perceived stress | Men: |
| The Pitt County study |
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| 5 years cohort | 4424 men and 5488 women | Job content Q | Change in BMI | Age, smoking, education level, marital status, country of birth, exercise pattern, and baseline BMI quartiles | Longstanding job strain vs no job strain |
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| Women: 18–39 and 60–80 years old, NS | |||||||
| Men all ages, NS | |||||||
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| 9.2 years cohort | 1355 men and women | Study specific scales on job-related demands, perceived constraint in life, strain in relations with family, strain in relation with spouse/partner, and strain in relation with friends | Change in BMI | BMI, age, race, income, generalized anxiety disorder, panic attack, depression, smoking, diabetes, self-rated health, and self-rated relative health | Job-related demands |
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| The MIDUS study |
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| Strain in relations with family | Men: | ||||||
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| Perceived constraint in life | Men: | ||||||
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| 10 years cohort | 328 men and women | Study specific question about mental strain at work | Weight gain >15 kg | Age, BMI, occupational status, and education | Increased job stress vs stable or decreased | Men: OR (95% CI), 0.8 (0.4–1.4) |
| A cohort of employees from the engineering industry in Finland | Women: OR (95% CI), 2.0 (0.9–4.8) | ||||||
| 28 years cohort | 305 men and women | Effort–reward imbalance | Low effort–reward imbalance vs high effort reward imbalance | Men: OR (95% CI), 1.7 (0.7–4.4) | |||
| Women: OR (95% CI), 0.6 (0.2–2.6) | |||||||
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| 6 years cohort | 2200 men and 1371 women | Job demand control Q | Change in BMI above the 75th percentile | Age, sedentary job, shift work, smoking, alcohol, exercise, education, and marital status | High job strain vs low job strain | Men: OR (95% CI), 1.23 (0.95–1.59) |
| A cohort of employees from a factory in Japan | Women: OR (95% CI), 0.92 (0.66–1.29) | ||||||
| Change in WC above the 75th percentile |
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| 19 years cohort | 6895 men and 3413 women | Job demand control Q | Change in BMI | Age, height, employment grade, education, and health behaviors | Over three episodes of iso-strain vs no iso-strain |
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| The Whitehall II study cohort |
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| Change in WC | Over three episodes of iso-strain vs no iso-strain |
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| Women: OR (95% CI), 2.26 (0.78–6.54) | |||||||
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| 5 years cohort | 5547 men and 2418 women | Modified version of the job demand control Q | Age, employment grade, and baseline BMI | The association between job strain at baseline and BMI at follow-up | Men: | |
| The Whitehall II study cohort | Women: | ||||||
| Weight gain among those with highest quartile of baseline BMI | Per 1 |
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| Weight gain among those with bottom quartile of BMI at baseline | Per 1 | OR (95% CI), 0.88 (0.76–1.01) | |||||
| Weight loss among those with highest quartile of BMI at baseline | Per 1 |
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| Weight loss among those with bottom quartile of BMI at baseline | Per 1 | OR (95% CI), 1.14 (0.99–1.32) | |||||
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| 25.6 years cohort | 545 men and 267 women | Work demands and job control Q | Mean BMI | Sex, age, and baseline BMI | Low vs high job strain |
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| A cohort of employees from factories in Finland | Q on effort–reward imbalance | Low vs high effort–reward imbalance |
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| 4–7 years cohort | 2511 men and 443 women | Job satisfaction measured by the Reeder Stress Inventory Q | Change in BMI | Age and occupational factors | Association between job satisfaction and change in BMI: dissatisfied with job at both baseline and follow-up | Regressions coefficient (95% CI) |
| A cohort of employees from workplaces in Scotland | Men: −0.44 (−0.89 to 0.00) | ||||||
| Women: 1.35 (−0.34 to 3.01) | |||||||
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| 15 years cohort | 2152 men and 2721 women | Study specific Q on stress of daily activities | Weight gain >10 kg | Age, BMI, education, dieting, alcohol consumption, and smoking pregnancy | High level of stress vs low level of stress | Men, 18–29 years: OR (95% CI), 1.06 (0.56–2.03) |
| Women, 18–29 years: OR (95% CI), 1.13 (0.63–2.04) | |||||||
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| Women, 30–54 years: OR (95% CI), 1.35 (0.68–2.66) | |||||||
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| 7 years cohort | 438 men | Self-reported stress level | Weight gain | No adjustments | Self-reported stress level | Men: correlation between self-reported stress level at baseline and weight change, NS |
| A cohort of firefighters, paramedics and fire service administrator |
Stress and dyslipidemia, prospective cohort studies.
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| 6.4 years cohort | 466 men and women | General health Q | Triglycerides >1.7 mM | Baseline value of psychological distress | High psychological distress vs low psychological distress | OR (95% CI), ∼1.7 (0.9–3.2) |
| A study cohort of middle aged subjects from Finland | HDL cholesterol <1.03 mM in men and <1.29 mM in women |
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| 18 years cohort | 4398 men and 1923 women | Justice at work Q | Triglycerides >1.7 mM or on lipid lowering medication | Age, ethnicity, and employment grade | Low justice at work vs high justice at work |
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| The Whitehall II study cohort | Women: HR (95% CI), 1.14 (0.2–1.41) | ||||||
| HDL cholesterol <1.03 mM in men and <1.3 mM in women, or on lipid lowering medication |
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| Women: HR (95% CI), 1.04 (0.84–1.30) | |||||||
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| 10 years cohort | 7066 men and women | Two questions on stress each rated on a four-point likert scale, combined into a seven-point stress score | Change from normal to high cholesterol (total cholesterol </>6.22 mM) | Sex, age, education, and marital status | Low stress vs high stress | Men and women: OR (95% CI), 0.88 (0.68–1.15) |
| The Copenhagen City Heart Study | |||||||
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| 25.6 years cohort | 545 men and 267 women | Work demands and job control Q | Serum total cholesterol | Sex, age, baseline cholesterol | Low vs high job strain |
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| A cohort of employees from factories in Finland | Q on effort–reward imbalance | Low vs high effort–reward imbalance |
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Stress and diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM2), prospective cohort studies.
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| 8 years (women) – 10 years cohort (men) | 2227 men and 3205 women | Demand-decision latitude Q | Incident pre-diabetes or DM measured with OGGT | Age, educational level, psychological distress, family history of diabetes, BMI, physical activity, smoking, and civil status | Job strain vs no job strain |
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| Stockholm Diabetes Prevention Program | High demands/low decision latitude yes vs no | Women: OR (95% CI), 2.1 (0.9–4.8) | |||||
| Men: OR (95% CI), 0.8 (0.4–1.7) | |||||||
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| 35 years cohort | 7251 men | One Q on self-perceived stress during the last 5 years | Incident DM from registries as principal or secondary diagnosis | Age, socio-economic status, BMI, SBP, use of anti-hypertensive medication, and physical inactivity | Permanent stress vs no stress |
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| Multifactor Primary Prevention Trial Study | |||||||
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| 5 years cohort | 3759 men and women | Perceived stress Q | OGTT | Age, education, physical activity, smoking, alcohol consumption, sedentary behavior, adiposity, baseline SBP, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, and fasting blood glucose | Highest level of perceived stress vs lowest level of perceived stress | Men: OR (95% CI), 1.18 (0.73–1.90) |
| The Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study |
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| 18 years cohort | 9514 men and women | General health Q | Self-reported DM | Age, female sex, marital status, education level, annual household income, energy, health status, health problems, activity, and smoking | High psychological distress vs low-psychological distress | Men and women: HR (95% CI), 1.10 (0.91–1.34) |
| The British Household Panel Survey | |||||||
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| 9 years cohort | 3691 men and 3752 women | Job content Q | Incident DM classified as respondent with one hospital admission with a DM diagnosis, or two physician service claims with a DM diagnosis | Age, immigration status, ethnicity, marital status, living location, and education. Baseline heart disease, hypertension, and depression. Activity limitations at work due to health problems, shift schedule, weeks worked, multiple jobs, physical activity at work, BMI, smoking, alcohol, leisure time physical activity, fruit, and vegetable consumption | High job control vs low job control | Men: HR (95% CI), 0.92 (0.56–1.51) |
| The Canadian Community Health Survey | High psychosocial demands vs low psychosocial demands |
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| Men: HR (95% CI), 0.77 (0.48–1.23) | |||||||
| Women: HR (95% CI), 0.76 (0.43–1.33) | |||||||
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| 3.4 years cohort | 5843 men and women | Job demands Q | FPG ≥7.0 or HbA1c ≥6.5 or physician diagnosed DM, or use of diabetic medication | Age, gender, education, family history of diabetes, smoking history, sport intensity, and depressive symptoms | Logistics regressions predicting the incidence of diabetes by perceived job control | Men and women: OR (95% CI), 1.05 (0.85–1.15) |
| Study cohort from Sourasky Medical Center (Tel Aviv) | |||||||
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| 18 years cohort | 3689 men and 1449 women | Job strain Q | OGTT ≥11.1 mM or FPG ≥7.0 or reported previously diagnosed DM or use of diabetic medication | Age, employment grade, diet pattern, alcohol consumption, physical activity, smoking status, SBP, triglycerides, and HDL cholesterol | Job strain in non-obese vs no job strain in non-obese |
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| The Whitehall II study cohort | Job strain in obese vs no job strain in non-obese | Women: HR (95% CI), 1.18 (0.63–2.10) | |||||
| Men: HR (95% CI), 1.05 (0.63–1.75) | |||||||
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| 6.4 years cohort | 466 men and women | General health Q | FPG ≥5.6 mM | Baseline value of psychological distress | High psychological distress vs low psychological distress | Men and women: OR (95% CI), 1.2 (0.75–2.0) |
| A study cohort of middle aged subjects from Finland | |||||||
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| 18 years cohort | 4398 men and 1923 women | Justice at work Q | FPG >6.1 mM or on antidiabetic medication | Age, ethnicity, and employment grade | Low justice at work vs high justice at work | Men: HR (95% CI), 1.09 (0.87–1.36) |
| The Whitehall II study cohort | Women: HR (95% CI), 0.80 (0.54–1.19) | ||||||
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| 10 years cohort | 7066 men and women | Two questions on stress | Self-reported incident DM | Sex, age, education, and marital status | High level of stress vs low level of stress |
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| The Copenhagen City Heart Study | Women: OR (95% CI), 0.80 (0.33–1.91) | ||||||
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| 10 years cohort | 55 826 men and women | Perceived mental stress Q | Self-reported incident DM | Age, BMI, smoking status, alcohol consumption, family history of DM, physical activity, history of hypertension, coffee consumption, type A behavior, and hours of sleep | High level of stress vs low level of stress |
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| The JPHC Cohort Study | Women: OR (95% CI), 1.22 (0.98–1.51) | ||||||
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| 10 years cohort | 2127 men and 3100 women | Psychological distress rated on a five question-Q | Incident DM, defined as OGTT ≥11.1 or FPG ≥7.0 or diagnosed DM | Age, BMI, family history of diabetes, smoking, physical activity, and socio-economic position | Highest level of distress vs lowest level of distress |
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| The Stockholm Diabetes Prevention Program | Women: 0.5 (0.2–1.2) | ||||||
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| 3.2 years cohort | 128 men | Perceived stress Q | Incident DM, defined as OGTT ≥11.1 or FPG ≥7.0 or non-fasting plasma glucose level >11.1 mM | Age, BMI, SBT, ALT, LDH, γ-GTP, ALP, protein, creatinine, triglyceride, HDL-C, LDL-C, uric acid, S-amylase, ESR, WBC, hgb, FBG, urinary protein, night duty, blue-collar job, administrative position, business bachelor, stress in daily life, satisfaction with lifestyle, fatigue, alcohol drinking, and current smoking | Stress in daily life vs no stress in daily life |
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| Japanese company employees cohort | |||||||
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| 5.7 years cohort | 62 574 women | Job demand-control Q | Incident DM defined as one or more classic diabetic symptoms and FPG ≥7.8 mM or a random PG ≥11.1 mM or treatment with hypoglycemic medication or OGTT ≥11.1 | Age, BMI, family history of diabetes, work hours, rotating night-shift work, hours at work sitting, job support, hours per week of work at home, leisure-time physical activity, smoking, alcohol intake, transunsaturated fat intake, glycemic load, caffeine intake, marital status, number of children, menopausal status, vitamin supplementation, and aspirin use | High demands and low decision latitude vs low demands and low decision latitude | Women: RR (95% CI), 1.11 (0.80–1.52) |
| Nurses Health Study II from the U.S. | |||||||
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| 10.5 years cohort | 8630 men and women | Job demand-control Q | Incident DM defined as OGTT ≥11.1 or FPG ≥7.0 or diagnosed DM | Age, length of follow-up, employment grade, ethnic group, ECG abnormalities, family history of diabetes, BMI, high systolic blood pressure, exercise, smoking, and life events | Effort–reward imbalance |
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| The Whitehall II study cohort | High job demands vs low job demands | Women: OR (95% CI), 0.93 (0.4–2.0) | |||||
| Men: OR (95% CI), 1.07 (0.7–1.6) | |||||||
| Women: OR (95% CI), 0.52 (0.3–1.1) | |||||||
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| 8 years cohort | 2597 men | Job demand-control Q | Incident DM defined as OGTT ≥11.1 or FPG ≥7.0 or self-reported diagnosed DM | Age, education, BMI, alcohol consumption, smoking, leisure time physical activity, and family history of NIDDM | Job strain vs no job strain | Men: HR (95% CI), 1.34 (0.50–3.55) |
| Japanese company employees cohort |
ALP, alkaline phosphatase; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; DM, diabetes mellitus; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; FPG, fasting plasma glucose; γ-GTP, gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test; PG, plasma glucose; SBP, systolic blood pressure; WBC, white blood count.
Stress and hypertension, prospective cohort studies.
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| 3 years cohort | 629 men and 966 women | Siegrist Q | Ambulatory systolic blood pressure (SBP) >135 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure (DBP) >85 mmHg | Age, sex, education, income, marital status, BMI, WC, family history of CVD, medication, diabetes, smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, leisure time physical activity, and overcommitment | Never exposed by effort–reward imbalance vs exposed at both baseline and follow-up | Cumulative incidence rate (95% CI): |
| A cohort of white-collar workers from Quebec City | Men: 1.04 (0.56–1.95) | ||||||
| Women <45 years old: 1.20 (0.53–2.75) | |||||||
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| 3.5 years cohort | 11 777 men and 49 145 women | The Workplace Social Capital Scale | Chronic hypertension based on health insurance examination, demanding high BP over 6 months followed by 6 months of antihypertensive treatment (office SBP >200 or DBP >95) | Age, sex, SES, marital status, employer, employment time and the size, proportion of male employees, geographic location of the work unit, and co-morbid diabetes or depression | Low vs high self-assessed workplace social capital |
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| The Finnish Public Sector Study | Job strain Q | Age only | High job strain vs low job strain | Women: HR (95% CI), 1.10 (0.92—1.31) | |||
| Men and women: HR (95% CI), 1.10 (0.97–1.25) | |||||||
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| 6.4 years cohort | 466 men and women | General health Q | Office BP >130/85 mmHg or use of antihypertensive treatment | Baseline value of psychological distress | High psychological distress vs low psychological distress | Men and women: OR (95% CI), 0.75 (0.4–1.1) |
| A study cohort of middle aged subjects from Finland | |||||||
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| 18 years cohort | 4398 men and 1923 women | Justice at work Q | Office BP >130/85 mmHg or antihypertensive treatment | Age, ethnicity, and employment grade | Low justice at work vs high justice at work |
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| The Whitehall II study cohort | Women: OR (95% CI), 1.02 (0.87–1.19) | ||||||
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| 10 years cohort | 7066 men and women | Two questions on stress | Start using antihypertensive medication during follow-up | Sex, age, education, marital status | High stress vs low stress | Men and women: OR (95% CI), 1.39 (1.05–1.84) |
| The Copenhagen City Heart Study | |||||||
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| 1 year cohort | 106 men and 123 women | Job content Q | Change in ambulatory 24 h SBP | Age, gender, ethnic background, premature coronary artery disease, education, BMI, smoking, alcohol use, participation in a stress management or relaxation technique program, regular exercise, and total family income | Job strain |
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| The Double Exposure Study | Dyadic adjustment scale | Low marital cohesion | Men and women: parameter estimate 0.219 ( | ||||
| Job strain×cohesion |
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| 6.5 years cohort | 448 men and women | Job demand-control Q | Change in systolic office BP | Age, follow-up time, BP treatment, baseline BP, and years of education | Job strain vs no job strain |
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| The Malmø Diet and Cancer Study | Change in diastolic office BP | Women: Δ2.1 (1.7) mmHg, | |||||
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| Women: Δ 0.3 mmHg, (1.0) | |||||||
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| 11 years cohort | 5630 men and 2456 women | Job strain: four questions on job demand and 15 on job control | Hypertension defined as ambulatory SBP ≥140 mmHg and DBP ≥90 mmHg or use of antihypertensive treatment | Age, sex, ethnicity, and employment grade | Increase in prevalence (hypertension) per year between low strain, passive, active and high strain groups | Men and women: |
| The Whitehall II study cohort | Increase in SBP |
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| Increase in DBP |
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| 7.5 years cohort | 3483 men and women | Job demand-control Q | Increase in office SBP | Baseline BP | Highest quintile for job strain at baseline and at follow-up vs never exposed |
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| A cohort of white-collar workers from Quebec City | Women: RR (95% CI), 1.15 (0.93–1.41) | ||||||
| Increase in office DBP | Highest quintile for job strain at baseline and at follow-up vs never exposed | Men: RR (95% CI), 1.07 (0.84–1.36) | |||||
| Women: RR (95% CI), 1.06 (0.85–1.31) | |||||||
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| 8 years cohort | 3200 men and women | Job demand-control Q | Office SBP >160, DBP >95, or start of using antihypertensive medication during follow-up | Age, BMI, baseline SBP, examination site, education level, and change in BMI | Change in decision latitude | Men and women: OR (95% CI) =1.02 (0.98–1.06) |
| The CARDIA study | Change in job demands |
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| Change in ratio of job demands and decision latitude |
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| 5 years cohort | 209 men and women | Job demand-control Q | 24-h ambulatory SBP | Gender, age, alcohol intake, BMI, occupation, and sodium intake | High job strain at both entry and follow-up vs no job strain at either entry or follow-up | Men and women: SBP, 118±2 vs 120±1 mmHg, NS |
| A cohort of employees from a chemical company in France | 24-h ambulatory DBP | Men and women: DBP, 76±2 vs 77±1 mmHg, NS | |||||
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| 4–7 years cohort | 2511 men and 443 women | Job satisfaction measured by the Reeder Stress Inventory Q | Change in office DBP | Age and occupational factors | Association between job satisfaction and change in DBP. Dissatisfied with job at both baseline and follow-up | Regressions coefficient (95% CI): |
| A cohort of employees from workplaces in Scotland | Men: −1.29 (−3.09 to 0.52) | ||||||
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| 20 years cohort | 2357 men and women | Qs on work-related stressors | Start of using antihypertensive medication during follow-up | Age, BMI, physical activity, alcohol consumption, depression, education, smoking, unemployment, race, and job status | Worried about keeping job vs not worried about keeping job |
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| The Alameda county study | Women: OR: 1.0 (0.7–1.5) | ||||||
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| 3 years cohort | 103 men and women | Dyadic adjustment scale | Increase in 24-h ambulatory BP | Sex, age, BMI, smoking status, alcohol use, practice of relaxation techniques, exercise, and previous antihypertensive medication | Lowest quartile of marital cohesion and increase in ambulatory blood pressure |
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| Cohabiting males or females | Lowest quartile of marital satisfaction and increase in ambulatory blood pressure | Men and women: | |||||
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| 3 years cohort | 195 men | Job content Q | Change in ambulatory SBP: | Age, BMI, ethnicity, alcohol use, type A behavior, education, and smoking |
| Men: significance of |
| The work site blood pressure study | At work |
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| At home |
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| While sleeping |
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| Change in ambulatory DBP: | |||||||
| At work |
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| At home |
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| While sleeping |
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CVD, cardiovascular disease; SES, socio-economic status.