| Literature DB >> 30766721 |
Andrea L Stewart1, Ummul-Kiram Kathawalla2, Alexandra G Wolfe3, Susan A Everson-Rose3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Women in mid-life experience unique stressors, including transitions within their family roles, informal caregiving, job stress, and perceived discrimination. The impact of these stressors on cardiovascular health in women during mid-life is of growing interest in both the popular and scientific literature. The objective of this review is to summarize the recent literature on stress and cardiovascular health in mid-life women. We focus on stressors that are relevant to mid-life women, including social stress and discrimination, and long-term risk of CVD events and subclinical CVD measures.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular disease; Discrimination; Psychosocial factors; Risk factors; Stress; Subclinical atherosclerosis; Women
Year: 2018 PMID: 30766721 PMCID: PMC6297972 DOI: 10.1186/s40695-018-0041-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Womens Midlife Health ISSN: 2054-2690
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for studies included in review of stress and cardiovascular disease in mid-life women from January 2012 to April 2018
Results of Studies of Stress and Cardiovascular Disease Events in Mid-life Women
| Author, Year, Study Name/Brief Description | N (% women) | Age Range | Mean Age (SD or SE) | Stratified by Sex or tested Stress X Sex Interactiona | Study design | Outcome | Stress measure | Results | QAT Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bohley et al. | 3901 (49%) | 20–83 | Women: 48.8 (12.1) | Stratified | Cross-sectional | CHD (MI, CABG, PCI), and CVD (CHD or stroke) (Self-report) | Stressors related to German Reunification (financial, occupational, personal) | Reunification stress related to greater prevalence of CHD in women only. | Fair |
| Buyck et al., Whitehall II, 2013 [ | 7925 (31%) | 39–63 | 49.5 (6.1) | Stratified | Prospective | CHD (fatal CHD, MI, angina) (Hospital record/self-report/verified with ECG) | Caregiving status, burden (> 5 vs < 5 h/week), duration | CHD risk did not differ between caregivers and non-caregivers. Caregiving burden and duration also not associated with greater CHD risk. | Fair |
| Dunlay et al. | 5085 (64%) | 21–94 | 55.3 (12.8) | Interaction (n.s.) | Prospective | Incident CHD, stroke or heart failure (Adjudicated) | Everyday Discrimination, Lifetime Discrimination | No association between discrimination and CVD outcomes. | Good |
| Egido et al. | 450 (50%) | 18–65 | 53.8 (9.3) | Interaction (n.s) | Case-control | Stroke (Hospital record) | Holmes & Rahe Questionnaire of Life Events | Stroke patients had higher odds of stressful life events than neighborhood controls. | Good |
| Everson-Rose et al. | 6749 (53%) | 45–84 | 62.1 (10.2) | Interaction (n.s.) | Prospective | Incident stroke, TIA (Adjudicated) | Chronic Burden Scale | Higher levels of chronic stress burden associated with increased risk of stroke or TIA. | Good |
| Everson-Rose et al. | 6508 (53%) | 45–84 | 62 (10.2) | Interaction (n.s.) | Prospective | Incident CVD events (adjudicated) | Everyday Discrimination, Lifetime discrimination | Lifetime discrimination in ≥2 domains related to greater risk of CVD events. Everyday discrimination not related to CVD events in women. | Good |
| Gallo et al. | 5313 (62%) | 18–74 | Not reported, 62% of sample age 45–74 | Interaction (n.s.) | Cross-sectional | Prevalent CVD (Self-report) | Chronic Burden Scale, Perceived Stress Scale, Traumatic Stress Screener | Chronic stress, but not PSS or traumatic stress, significantly related to prevalent CHD. | Good |
| Graff et al., 2017, Danish National Health Survey [ | 114,337 (54%) | 25+ | Not reported, majority 45–65 | Interaction (n.s.) | Prospective | Atrial Fibrillation (Patient register) | Perceived Stress Scale | No significant association between PSS and 4-year AF incidence after adjustment for comorbidities, SES and lifestyle factors. | Good |
| Guiraud et al., 2013, A case-crossover study of ischemic stroke and stress [ | 247 (42%) | 18+ | 61.3 (15.9) | Interaction (n.s.) | Case-crossover | Stroke (Hospital record) | Interview for Recent Life Events | Stroke patients experienced ≥1 life event more often during first month and week preceding stroke than during control periods. | Fair |
| Jood et al., 2017, A case-control study of stress and stroke [ | 594 (32%) | 30–65 | 54.4 (7.9) | Stratified | Case-control | Stroke (Hospital record) | Past 12-month job strain, Effort-reward imbalance (ERI), Work conflicts | Job strain, conflict at work, and ERI all higher in stroke cases than community controls. | Fair |
| Kershaw et al. | 82,000 (100%) | 52–72 | Women: 62.1 (0.05) | N/A | Prospective | CHD and stroke (Adjudicated) | Life events, Social strain | Life events and social strain related to increased CVD, but not after adjusting for behavioral and biological risk factors. | Good |
| Kershaw et al., 2015, MESA [ | 6678 (50%) | 45–84 | 62.4 (0.2) | Interaction (n.s.) | Prospective | Incident CHD (Adjudicated) | Chronic Burden Scale (Individual stress), Neighborhood-level stress | High tertile individual chronic stress and medium tertile neighborhood chronic stress associated with greater incident CHD. | Good |
| Kriegbaum et al., 2013, Danish Population Study [ | 42 million (50%) | 30–65 | Not reported, age range 30–65 | Stratified | Prospective | MI (Registry) | Broken partnership | Broken partnerships were associated with increased risk of incident MI in the year of the break-up and in subsequent years. The association varied by age, with MI risk of same-year break-up significant among older women (50–65) but not younger women (30–49). | Good |
| Lazzarino et al., 2013, Health Survey for England [ | 66,518 (54%) | 35+ | 55.1 (13.8) | Stratified | Prospective | CVD mortality (Vital registration) | Psychological distress | Greater psychological distress associated with risk of CVD death. | Good |
| Morton et al., 2014, MIDUS [ | 3032 (52%) | 25–74 | Not reported | Stratified | Prospective | MI (Self-report) | Family strain (demands, criticism, let down, get on nerves) | Family strain in mid-life not related to MI. | Fair |
| Ogilvie et al., 2016, MESA [ | 6809 (53%) | 45–84 | 62.2 (10.2) | Interaction (n.s.) | Prospective | Heart failure (Adjudicated) | Chronic Burden Scale | High baseline chronic stress not related to increased risk of heart failure | Good |
| O’Neal et al., 2015, REGARDS [ | 25,530 (54%) | Not reported | 65 (9.4) | Stratified | Cross-sectional | Atrial Fibrillation (ECG) | Perceived Stress Scale | PSS significantly related to AF, even after adjustment for covariates. | Fair |
| Padyab et al., 2014, Swedish Intervention Program [ | 74,988 (51%) | 40–60 | 49 (8) | Stratified | Prospective | CVD mortality (Registry) | Karasek job strain model (demand, control) | Job demand, control, and job strain not associated with CVD risk. | Good |
| Redmond et al., 2013, REGARDS [ | 24,439 (55%) | Not reported | 64.1 (9.3) | Interaction (n.s.) | Prospective | Incident CHD, Incident fatal CHD (Adjudicated) | Perceived Stress Scale | Participants with a stress score in the highest tertile had a greater risk of incident CHD, in low income group only (<$35,000). | Good |
| Slopen et al., 2012, Women’s Health Study [ | 22,086 (100%) | Not reported | Women: 57.2 (5.2) | N/A | Prospective | Incident CVD (MI, stroke, CABG, PCI or CVD death) (Adjudicated) | Job strain, Job insecurity | Job strain, but not insecurity, related to incident CVD. Women with “active” jobs (high demand, high control) also had an increased CVD risk. | Good |
| Svensson et al., 2017, Malmö Diet and Cancer Study [ | 18,559 (62%) | 45–73 | 58.3 (8.0) | Interaction (n.s.) | Prospective | CAD (MI, CABG, PCI); fatal MI; non-fatal MI; CVD death (Government Registries) | Job strain, non-work stress | Combined work and non-work stress index unrelated to CAD, MI or CVD death. | Good |
| Udo et al., 2016, NESARC [ | 21,357 (53%) | 18+ | 46.2 (16.4) | Stratified | Cross-sectional | self-reported MI, stroke, arteriosclerosis | Perceived weight discrimination, Stressful life events | Perceived weight discrimination associated with arteriosclerosis and MI in women only. | Poor |
aIn this column “n.s.” indicates that an interaction was tested in an analysis and found to be non-significant and results reported are for pooled estimates between men and women. An “s” indicates a significant interaction was found, and results reported are specific to women. For studies that reported sex-stratified analyses, only results for women are reported
Results of Studies of Stress and Subclinical Cardiovascular Disease in Mid-life Women
| Author, Year, Study Name/Brief Description | N (% women) | Age Range | Mean Age | Stratified by Sex or tested Stress X Sex Interaction a | Study design | Outcomes | Stress measure | Results | QAT Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bomhof-Roordink et al., 2015, Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety [ | 650 (65%) | 20–66 | 46.5 (12.1) | Interaction (n.s.) | Cross-sectional | Carotid bifurcation IMT, Plaque presence, Arterial stiffness (Ultrasound/ Radial applanation tonometry) | Job strain, Negative life events | Recent life stress significantly associated with arterial stiffness but not IMT or plaque, even after adjusting for lifestyle factors. | Good |
| Camelo et al., 2015, ELSA-Brasil [ | 8806 (54%) | 35–74 | Not reported, 47.4% of sample between ages 45–54 | Stratified | Cross-sectional | Carotid IMT (Ultrasound) | Job strain | High strain jobs associated with higher IMT, but not independent of life course SES. Passive work (low control, low demand) also associated with IMT in women. | Good |
| Charles et al., 2014, MESA [ | 1499 (45%) | 45–84 | 56.1 (0.21) | Interaction (n.s.) | Cross-sectional | Flow-mediated dilation (Ultrasound) | Job strain | Job strain, demands, and control not associated with FMD. Occupational category related to FMD in women only. | Good |
| Flores-Torres et al., 2017, Mexican Teacher’s Cohort [ | 634 (100%) | 40+ | Women: 48.9 (4.3) | N/A | Cross-sectional | Carotid IMT, Plaques (Ultrasound) | Life Stressors Checklist (Physical or Sexual violence) | Exposure to physical violence associated with increased IMT and odds of subclinical carotid atherosclerosis. Longer duration of sexual violence associated with IMT. Violence in adulthood, but not childhood, associated with subclinical CVD. | Fair |
| Fujishiro et al., 2015, MESA [ | 3109 (52%) | 45–84 | Women:59.8 (9.4) | Stratified | Prospective | Carotid plaque, IMT progression (Ultrasound) | Job demands, Control, Interpersonal stress | Job strain, interpersonal stress not related to subclinical CVD progression in women. | Good |
| Gebreab et al., 2012, Jackson Heart Study [ | 3980 (63%) | 21–94 | Women:55.1 (12.5) | Stratified | Cross-sectional | Carotid plaque (Ultrasound) | Global Perceived Stress Scale, Holmes & Rahe Life Changes, Jones & Brantley Weekly Stress Inventory | Stress unrelated to presence of plaque in carotid arteries. | Fair |
| Janssen et al., 2012, SWAN [ | 336 (100%) | 48–58 | Women: 50.8 (2.7) | N/A | Prospective | CAC progression (Electron Beam Computed Tomography) | Multiple Role Questionnaire | Stress not related to CAC. Rewarding roles associated with CAC progression in Black women. | Good |
| Joseph et al. 2014, AHAB-2 [ | 281 (48%) | 30–55 | 42.0 (7.3) | Interaction (n.s.) | Cross-sectional | Carotid IMT (Ultrasound) | Marital interaction quality | More negatively-rated interactions with spouses associated with greater IMT. | Good |
| Kamarck et al., 2012, Pittsburgh Healthy Heart Study [ | 270 (54%) | 50–70 | Not available | Interaction (n.s.) | Prospective | Plaque, IMT progression (Ultrasound) | Daily psychological demands | Increased demands in non-hypertensive patients associated with increased plaque, IMT. | Good |
| Kershaw et al., 2017, MESA [ | 2963 (53%) | 45–84 | 61.8 (13.6) | Interaction (n.s.) | Cross-sectional | Flow-mediated dilation (Ultrasound) | Chronic Burden Scale | Chronic stress significantly related to %FMD, but not after adjusting for risk factors. | Good |
| Ortega-Montiel et al., 2015, GEA Study [ | 1243 (67%) | 30–75 | 54.2 (9.0) | Stratified | Cross-sectional | Carotid IMT (Ultrasound) | Chronic self-perceived stress | Higher stress associated with greater IMT in women only. | Fair |
| Peterson et al., 2016, SWAN [ | 1056 (100%) | Not reported | Women: 59.48 (2.7) | N/A | Prospective | Carotid IMT, AD (Ultrasound) | Everyday Discrimination Scale | Cumulative unfair treatment associated with IMT in Caucasian but not minority women. | Good |
| Shah et al., 2016, MASALA] [ | 894 (47%) | 40–84 | Women: 54.4 (8.7) | Stratified | Cross-sectional | Carotid IMT (Ultrasound) | Chronic Burden scale, Everyday Discrimination | Current life stress and life stress over the past six months significantly related to CCA IMT in women only. Everyday discrimination unrelated to IMT in South Asian women. | Good |
| Thurston et al., 2014, SWAN [ | 1402 (100%) | Not reported | Women: 59.6 (2.7) | N/A | Cross-sectional | Carotid IMT, Plaque (Ultrasound) | Childhood physical/Sexual abuse; Adulthood physical/Sexual abuse | Adulthood abuse was related to greater odds of plaque; no associations with IMT. | Good |
| Thurston et al., 2018, peri- and post-menopausal women [ | 272 (100%) | 40–60 | Women: 54 (3.9) | N/A | Cross-sectional | Flow-mediated dilation (Ultrasound) | Brief Trauma Questionnaire, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire | Women with ≥3 trauma exposures in adulthood had worse (lower) FMD; association unchanged after controlling for childhood trauma. | Good |
Acronyms: AF atrial fibrillation, AHAB-2 Adult Health and Behavior Project- Phase 2, CABG Coronary artery bypass graft, CAC coronary artery calcification, CHD coronary heart disease, CVD cardiovascular disease, ECG Electrocardiogram, ELSA-Brasil Brazilian Longitudinal Study of Adult Health, ERI effort-reward imbalance, FMD flow-mediated dilation, GEA Genetics of Atherosclerosis Disease [Genetica de la Enfermedad Aterosclerosa], HCHS/SOL SCAS Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos Sociocultural Ancillary Study, IMT intimal-media thickness, MASALA Mediators of Atherosclerosis in South Asians Living in America, MESA Multi-Ethnic Study of Adults, MI myocardial infarction, n.s. not significant, PCI percutaneous coronary intervention, QAT Quality Assessment Tool, REGARDS Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke, SES Socio-economic status, SWAN Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation, TIA transient ischemic attack
aIn this column “n.s.” indicates that an interaction was tested in an analysis and found to be non-significant and results reported are for pooled estimates between men and women. An “s” indicates a significant interaction was found, and results reported are specific to women. For studies that reported sex-stratified analyses, only results for women are reported