| Literature DB >> 34797835 |
Thomas Vaessen1,2, Aki Rintala1,3, Natalya Otsabryk1, Wolfgang Viechtbauer1,4, Martien Wampers1,5, Stephan Claes2,5, Inez Myin-Germeys1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stress plays an important role in the development of mental illness, and an increasing number of studies is trying to detect moments of perceived stress in everyday life based on physiological data gathered using ambulatory devices. However, based on laboratory studies, there is only modest evidence for a relationship between self-reported stress and physiological ambulatory measures. This descriptive systematic review evaluates the evidence for studies investigating an association between self-reported stress and physiological measures under daily life conditions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34797835 PMCID: PMC8604333 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0259557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow chart.
Self-reported stress measures.
| First author (year) | Scale name and construction (if applicable) and individual items | Scale | Number of items |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Schilling (2020) | Likert (5-point) | 1 | |
| Birk (2019) | VAS (0–100) | 1 | |
| Krkovic (2018) | Average over [“ | Likert (10-point) | 10 |
| Dennis (2016) | Distressed | Likert (5-point) | 1 |
| Kennedy (2015) | Stressed | Likert (5-point) | 1 |
| Riediger (2014) | Nervous | Likert (7-point) | 1 |
| Pieper (2010) | Tense or restless | Likert (5-point) | 1 |
| Ebner-Priemer (2007) | “ | Likert (11-point) | 1 |
| Pollard (2007) | Stress level over the past hour | Likert (7-point) | 1 |
| Meininger (2004) | Stress | YES/NO | 1 |
| Bacon (2004) | Stressed | Likert (5-point) | 1 |
| Buckley (2004) | Stressor | YES/NO | 1 |
| Tsai (2003) | Tenseness | Likert (5-point) | 1 |
|
| |||
| Schilling (2020) | Sum of five unspecified negative affect items | Likert (5-point) | 5 |
| Schwerdtfeger (2019) | Average over [upset, distressed, agitated, tense, nervous] | Likert (7-point) | 5 |
| Dennis (2017, 2018) | Average over [irritated, annoyed, angry, distressed, upset, hostile, stressed] | Likert (5-point) | 7 |
| Zawadzki (2016) | Valence of affect | Likert (7-point) | 1 |
| Edmondson (2015) | Cube root of “ | VAS (0–100) | 1 |
| Lehman (2015) | Shame; anger | VAS (0.1–10) | 4 |
| Kimhy (2014) | Highest rating of [anxiety, loneliness, irritation, sadness, happiness/relaxation (reversed)] | VAS (0–100) | 5 |
| Schwerdtfeger (2014) | Sum of [insecure, downhearted, anxious, ashamed, worried, dissatisfied] | Likert (6-point) | 6 |
| Friedmann (2013) | Average over [frustrated, angry, unhappy, nervous, rushed, irritable, sad, stressed] | VAS (0–100) | 8 |
| Ilies (2010) | Average over [upset, distressed, hostile] | Likert (5-point) | 3 |
| Pieper (2010) | Angry or irritated | Likert (5-point) | 3 |
| Bacon (2004) | Anger; sadness; tiredness | Likert (5-point) | 3 |
| Meiniger (2004) | Angry | YES/NO | 4 |
| Tsai (2003) | Annoyance | Likert (5-point) | 1 |
| Carels (2000) | Sum of [tension, frustration, stress] | Likert (5-point) | 3 |
| Picot (1999) | Angry | VAS (0–10) | 3 |
| Kamarck (1998) | Average over [sad, frustrated, stressed, upset] | Likert (4-point) | 4 |
| Sloan (1994) | Average over [happy (reversed), irritable, tense, Pressured] | Likert (7-point) | 4 |
|
| |||
| Pieper (2010, 2007) | Occurrence of minor stressful event in the past 60 minutes | YES/NO | 1 |
| Luecken (2009) | Occurrence of minor stressful event in the past 30 minutes | YES/NO | 1 |
|
| |||
| Schmid (2020) | Likert (7-point) | 1 | |
| Thomas (2019) | YES/NO | 2 + 3 | |
| Johnston (2016) | YES/NO | 5 + 3 | |
| Hawkley (2003) | Likert (5-point) | 1 | |
| Hawkley (2003) | Likert (5-point) | 1 | |
| Kamarck (1998) | Likert (4-point) | 3 + 2 | |
|
| |||
| Thomas (2019) | Likert (6-point) | 2 | |
| Cornelius (2018) | VAS (0–10) | 1 | |
| Lehman (2015) | Likert (5-point) VAS (0–10) | 3 | |
| Kennedy (2015) | “ | Likert (5-point) | 1 |
| Lehman (2010) | VAS (1–10) | 1 | |
| Kamarck (1998) | Likert (4-point) | 5 | |
VAS: visual analogue scale.
* High-arousal negative affect measures.
a This study used a combination of perceived stress and NA items.
b these studies report on the same sample with similar analyses, we used the results from Thomas (2019) for all our purposes.
Associations with heart rate variability.
| First author (year) | Sample n (females:males), mean age ± SD | Study length | Sampling frequency (sampling scheme) | Self-reported stress measures | Cardiovascular measures | Statistical analysis | Data points | Average completed prompts per subject (compliance %) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schilling (2020) | Police officers 201 (72:129), 38.6 ± 10.1 | 2 days | Once per hour between 12 a.m. and 7 p.m. for all shift workers and between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. for regular office workers (random) | PS (momentary) | RMSSD (10 minutes following prompt) | MLM | np | 6.7 (80.9) | No association between PS; no association between NA and RMSSD |
| Schmid (2020) | Teachers 101 (70:31), 42.9 ± 11.5 | 2 days | Every 1–2 hours between 7.30 a.m. and 9 p.m. (random) | AS (momentary) | InRMSSD (5 minutes following prompt) | MLM | 669 | 10.2 (86.0) | No association between AS and InRMSSD |
| Schwerdtfeger (2019) | Firefighters 43 (0:43), 32.7 ± 6.9 | 1 day | Every 60 minutes (random) | NA (momentary) | InRMSSD (6 minutes following prompt) | MLM | 623 | 5.2 (np) | No association between NA and InRMSSD |
| Dennis (2018) | Young adults with trauma 178 (100:78), 28.8 ± 5.54 | 1 day | Every 2–3 hours (random) | NA (momentary) | LF-HRV HF-HRV (5 minutes following prompt) | MLM | 1,221 | 6.9 (85.0) | No association between NA and LF-HRV or HF-HRV |
| Dennis (2016) | Patients with PTSD 99 (49:50), 30.3 ± 5.4 no-PTSD patients 120 (64:56), 27.8 ± 5.47 | 1 day | Every 2–3 hours (random) | PS (momentary) | LF-HRV (bpm) HF-HRV (5 minutes following prompt) | MLM | 1,621 | 7.4 (np) | Negative association between PS and LF-HRV; marginal negative association between perceived stress and HF-HRV in combined sample |
| Schwerdtfeger (2014) | Healthy adults 117 (67:50), 27.8 ± 5.4 | 3 days | Every 50–80 minutes between 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. (random) | NA (momentary) | lnRMSSD (past 5) | MLM | 3,346 | np (81.0) | No association between NA and RMSSD |
| Kimhy (2010) | Patients with psychosis 20 (10:10), 30.6 ± 8.4 | 2 days | 10 per day between 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. (random) | NA (momentary) (every 1–143 min) | LF-HRV HF-HRV (5 minutes prior to and following prompt) | MLM | 300 | np (79.0) | Negative association between NA and HF-HRV; no association between NA and LF-HRV |
| Pieper (2010) | Teachers 73 (24:49), 46.7 ± 9.5 | 4 days | Between 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. in 45–75 minute intervals (random) | PS (momentary) NA (momentary) ES (past hour) | lnMSSD (15 minutes prior to diary) | MLM | 1,957 | 26.8 (np) | No association between PS, NA, or ES and lnMSSD |
| Ebner-Priemer (2008) | BPD patients 50 (50:0), 31.3 ± 8.1 Hhealthy controls 50 (50:0), 27.7 ± 6.8 | 1 day | Every 10–20 minutes (random) | PS (momentary) | Additive HF-HRV (10–20 minutes prior to prompt) | MLM | 5,410 | 52.3 (bpd) 55.9 (hp) (np) | No association between PS and additive HF-HRV in combined sample |
| Pieper (2007) | Teachers 73 (24:49) 46.7 ± 9.5 | 4 days | 14 per day between 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. (random) | ES (past hour) | lnRMSSD (5–60 minute interval in hour prior to prompt, on average 6.85 minutes) | MLM | 2,653 | 36.3 (64.8) | Marginal negative association between event stress and lnRMSSD |
| Bacon (2004) | Coronary artery disease patients 135 (41:94), 63 ± 10.0 | 2 days day not reported | Every 20-minutes (fixed) | PS (momentary) NA (momentary) | Momentary lnHF-HRV momentary lnLF-HRV (1 minute during diary) | MLM | 15,390 | 114.0 (np) | Negative association between PS and both HF-HRV and LF-HRV, and between NA and both HF-HRV and LF-HRV |
| Sloan (1994) | Healthy individuals 33 (2:31), 37.9 ± 12.8 | 1 day | Once per hour (random) | NA (momentary) | Mean rr interval lnLF-HRV lnHF-HRV (5 minutes prior to diary) | MLM | 362 | np | Negative association between NA and mean RR interval; no association between NA and LF-HRV or HF-HRV |
PTSD: post-traumatic stress disorder; BPD: borderline personality disorder; AS: activity-related stress; NA: negative affect; PS: perceived stress; ES: event-related stress; LF-HRV: low-frequency heart rate variability; HF-HRV: high-frequency heart rate variability; RMSSD: root mean square of successive differences; MSSD: mean square of successive differences; MLM: multilevel modelling; np: not provided; marginal association means p < .1.
Studies controlled for the effects of relevant time-invariant factors:
1age,
2sex,
3body shape factors (body-mass index/ waist-hip ratio),
4socioeconomic factors (education/ income/ employment status/ socioeconomic status, mother’s education),
5racial or minority-related factors (race, ethnicity, minority status),
6medication status,
7smoking status,
8health-related risk factors (general health/ psychopathology/ family history of hypertension/ cardiovascular risk factors/ hypertension diagnosis),
9sleep,
10menstrual cycle; and time-variant factors:
11posture,
12physical activity,
13substance use (intake of alcohol, nicotine, caffeine, or recreational drugs),
14food intake,
15medication use,
16temperature,
17talking,
18location,
19mood,
20presence of another person,
21time.
+: significant positive association; ~+: marginally significant positive association; ~-: marginally significant negative association; -: significant negative association; ∙: no association.
a These studies report on the same sample with different analyses.
b These studies report on the same sample with different analyses.
c These numbers are estimated based on average number of data entries.
Associations with ambulatory blood pressure.
| First author (year) | Sample n (females:males), mean age ± SD | Study length | Sampling frequency (sampling scheme) | Self-reported stress measures | Cardiovascular measures | Statistical analysis | Data points | Average completed prompts per subject (compliance %) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Birk (2019) | Healthy employees 373 (232:141), 52.0 ± np | 1 day | Every 30 minutes (fixed) | PS (past 10 min) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLM | np | np | Positive association between PS and SBP and DBP |
| Thomas (2019) | Healthy, working midlife adults 477 (241:236), 42.7 ± 7.3 | 4 days | Every 60 minutes (fixed) | AS (past 10 min) SS (past 10 min) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLM | 25,386 | np | Positive association between AS and SBP and DBP and between SS and SBP; no association between SS and DBP |
| Cornelius (2018) | Healthy employees 805 (482:323), 45.3 ± 10.3 | 1 day | Every 28–30 minutes (fixed) | SS (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLM | 11,190 | 24.6 (np) | Positive association between SS and SBP; no association with DBP |
| Zawadzki (2016) | General community adults 39 (26:13), 51.697 ± 12.94 | 1 day | Every 20 minutes (fixed) | NA (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLM | 1,368 | np | Positive association between SBP and NA; no association with DBP |
| Edmondson (2015) | Healthy employees 858 (507:351), 45.2 ± 10.4 | 1 day | Every 28 minutes (fixed) | NA (momentary) | SBP (momentary) | MLM | 20,916 | 24.4 (np) | Positive association between momentary NA and SBP |
| Lehman (2015) | Undergraduate students 68 (44:24), 20.6 ± 2.5 | 3 days | Every 42–78 minutes (random) | NA (momentary) SS (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLM | 1,957 | 35.0 (np) | Marginal positive association between SS and NA (anxiety) and SBP; no association between SS or NA (anxiety) and DBP; no association between other NA items and SBP or DBP |
| Friedmann (2013) | Pet owners 32 (27:5), 60.5 ± 1.3 | 3 days | Every 20 minutes (fixed) | NA (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | GEE | 2,430 | Median of 79.0 (np) | Negative association between NA and DBP; no association between NA and SBP |
| Lehman (2010) | Undergraduate students 99 (69:30), 21 ± np | 4 days | Every 60 minutes (fixed) | SS (past 10 min) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) (every 60 min) | MLM | 3,420 | 35.0 (np) | Positive association between SS and SBP and DBP |
| Ilies (2010) | University employees 67 (54:13), 42.6 ± 9.44 | 10 days | 4 per day, of which first 3 prompts randomly every 2 hours and the last prompt fixed at 4.45 p.m. (mixed) | NA (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLMnp | 1,937 | np (72.3) | Positive association between NA and both SBP and DBP |
| Luecken (2009) | Undergraduate students from bereaved families 43 (26:17), 19.1 ± 1.4 Undergraduate students from non-bereaved families 48 (31:17), 20.0 ± 2.3 | 1 day | Every 30 minutes in 20-minute intervals (random) | ES (past hour) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLM | 2,348 | 26.0 (81.0) | Positive association between ES and both SBP and DBP in combined sample |
| Pollard (2007) | Women with premenopausal women 26 (26:0), 39.0 ± 5.9 Women with postmenopausal 7 (7:0), 58.4 ± 4.4 | 2 days | 6 assessments per day (fixed) | PS (past hour) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLM | 376 | np (94.9) | Positive association between PS and both SBP and DBP in combined sample |
| Meininger (2004) | Adolescents of 11–16 years 307 (np:np), np ± np | 1 day | Every 30 minutes (fixed) | PS (momentary) NA (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLM | 8,428 | np (65.0) | No association between PS and SBP or DBP; negative association between NA (bored) and both SBP and DBP; marginal positive association between NA (angry) and SBP; no association between NA (irritable or sad) and SBP and DBP; no association between NA (angry) and DBP |
| Buckley (2004) | Vietnam combat veterans with PTSD 19 (0:19), 51.1 ± 3.3 Vietnam combat veterans without PTSD 17 (0:17), 53.4 ± 3.1 | 1 day | Every 20 minutes (fixed) | PS (momentary) | SBP (momentary)DBP (momentary) | MLM | np | np | No association between PS and SBP or DBP in combined sample |
| Tsai (2003) | Women with normotensive 12 (12:0), 39.7 ± 7.7 | 1 day | Every 30 minutes between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. and every 60 minutes between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. (fixed) | PS (momentary) NA (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) PP (momentary) | MLM | 1,249 | np | Positive association between PS and both DBP and PP; no association between PS and SBP; no association between NA and DBP, SBP, DBP, or PP |
| Hawkley (2003) | Undergraduate students 70 (np:np), np ± np | 1 day | Every 45–120 minutes (random) | AS (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) AP (momentary) | MLM | 441 | np (90.0) | No association between AS and SBP, DBP, or MAP |
| Carels (2000) | High emotional responsive 81 (41:40), np ± np Low emotional responsive 81 (36:45), np ± np | 1 day | Approximately 4 times per hour between 7 a.m. and 11 p.m. and 2 times per hour between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. (random) | NA (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | GEE | 8,359 | 51.6 (np) | Positive association between NA and both SBP and DBP in combined sample |
| Picot (1999) | Afro-American female caregivers 37 (37:0), 55 ± 12.7 Afro-American female non-caregivers 38 (38:0), 50 ± 15.2 | 1 day | Every 30 minutes (fixed) | NA (momentary) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | GEE | np | np | Negative association between NA (anger) and SBP in cargivers; marginal negative association between NA (anger) and DBP in caregivers; no association between NA (anger) and SBP or DBP in non-cargivers; no association with NA (unhappy) or NA (anxious) and SBP or DBP in either group |
| Kamarck (1998) | Full-time workers living with a partner 120 (64:56), 35 ± np | 6 days | Every 45 minutes (fixed) | NA (past 10 min) SS (past 10 min) | SBP (momentary) DBP (momentary) | MLM | 13,080 | Np (99.0) | Positive association between NA and both SBP and DBP; no association between SS and SBP or DBP |
PTSD: posttraumatic stress disorder; AS: activity-related stress; SS: social stress; NA: negative affect; PS: perceived stress; ES: event-related stress; SBP: systolic blood pressure; DBP: diastolic blood pressure; PP: pulse pressure; MAP: mean arterial pressure; MLM: multilevel modelling; GEE: generalized estimating equation; np: not provided; marginal association means p < .1.
Studies controlled for the effects of relevant time-invariant factors:
1age,
2sex,
3body shape factors (body-mass index/ waist-hip ratio),
4socioeconomic factors (education/ income/ employment status/ socioeconomic status, mother’s education),
5racial or minority-related factors (race, ethnicity, minority status),
6medication status,
7smoking status,
8health-related risk factors (general health/ psychopathology/ family history of hypertension/ cardiovascular risk factors/ hypertension diagnosis),
9sleep,
10menstrual cycle; and time-variant factors:
11posture,
12physical activity,
13substance use (intake of alcohol, nicotine, caffeine, or recreational drugs),
14food intake,
15medication use,
16temperature,
17talking,
18location,
19mood,
20presence of another person,
21time.
+: significant positive association; ~+: marginally significant positive association; ~-: marginally significant negative association; -: significant negative association; ∙: no association.
a These studies report on the same sample with different analyses.
b These studies report on the same sample with similar analyses, we used the results from Thomas (2019) for all our purposes.
c These numbers are estimated based on average number of data entries.
d This number was inferred from the degrees of freedom reported.
Associations with heart rate.
| First author (year) | Sample n (females:males), mean age ± SD | Study length | Sampling frequency (sampling scheme) | Self-reported stress measures (timing relative to beep) | Cardiovascular measures (timing relative to prompts) | Statistical analysis | Data points | Average completed prompts (compliance %) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cornelius (2018) | Healthy employees 805 (482:323), 45.3 ± 10.3 | 1 day | Every 28–30 minutes (fixed) | SS (momentary) | HR (momentary) | MLM | 11,190 | 24.6 (np) | No association between SS and HR |
| Dennis (2018) | Young adults with trauma 178 (100:78), 28.8 ± 5.54 | 1 day | Every 2–3 hours (np) | NA (momentary) | HR (next 5 min) | MLM | 1,221.08 | 6.9 (85.0) | No association between NA and HR |
| Krkovic (2018) | Individuals with psychotic-like experiences 67 (48:19), 23.1 ± 4.6 | 1 day | Every 20 minutes between 9 a.m. and 10 p.m. (fixed) | PS/NA (past 20 min) | HR (past 20 min) | Correlation analysis at the within-subject level | 2,042 | np (81.0) | No association between PS/NA and HR |
| Dennis (2017) | Young adults with trauma 197 (100:97), 28.87 ± 5.57 | 1 day | Every 2–3 hours (random) | NA (past 5 min) | HR (next 5 min) | MLM | 1,369.15 | 7.0 (np) | No association between NA and HR |
| Dennis (2016) | Individuals with PTSD 99 (49:50), 30.3 ± 5.4 Individuals with no-PTSD 120 (64:56), 27.8 ± 5.47 | 1 day | Every 2–3 hours (random) | PS (momentary) | HR (next 5 min) | MLM | 1,620.6 | 7.4 (np) | No association between PS and HR in combined sample |
| Johnston (2016) | Nurses 100 (93:7), 36.4 ± 9.9 | 2 days | 8 per day (np) Every 90 minutes in 30-minute intervals (random) | AS (past 10 min) | HR (past 10 min) | MLM | 1,453 | np (98.5) | No association between AS and HR |
| Lehman (2015) | Undergraduate students 68 (44:24), 20.6 ± 2.5 | 3 days | Every 42–78 minutes (random) | NA (momentary) SS (momentary) | HR (momentary) | MLM | 1,957 | 35.0 (np) | Marginal positive association between SS or NA (anxiety) and HR; no association between NA (shame), NA (embarrassment), or NA (anger) and HR |
| Kennedy (2015) | Polydrug users 40 (10:30), 41.4 ± 8.3 | 23 days | 3 per day (random) | PS (momentary) SS (momentary) | HR (past and next 15 min) | MLM | 2,329 | np | Positive association between PS and HR and between SS and HR |
| Riediger (2014) | Healthy individuals 92 (51:41), 42.4 ± 19.0 | 2 days | 6 per day every 2 hours (random) | PS (momentary) | HR (momentary) | MLM | 644 | 7.0 (58.3) | Positive association between PS and HR; no association between PS (squared) and HR |
| Lehman (2010) | Undergraduate students 99 (69:30), 21 ± np | 4 days | Every 60 minutes (fixed) | SS (past 10 min) | HR (momentary) | MLM | 3,420 | 35 (np) | No association between SS and HR |
| Ilies (2010) | University employees 67 (54:13), 42.6 ± 9.44 | 10 days | 4 per day, of which first 3 prompts randomly every 2 hours and the last prompt fixed at 4.45 p.m. (mixed) | NA (momentary) | HR (momentary) | MLM not reporte | 1,937 | np (72.3) | Positive association between NA and HR |
| Kimhy (2010) | Individuals with psychosis 20 (10:10), 30.6 ± 8.4 | 2 days | 10 per day between 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. (random) | NA (momentary) (every 1 to 143 min) | HR (past and next 5 minutes) | MLM | 300 | np (79.0) | No association between NA and HR |
| Pieper (2010) | Teachers 73 (24:49), 46.7 ± 9.5 | 4 days | Between 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. in 45–75 minute intervals (random) | PS (momentary) NA (momentary) ES (past hour) | HR (15 minutes interval Following retrospectively reported event) | MLM | 1,957 | 26.8 (np) | Marginal positive association between PS and HR; no association between NA and HR; no association between ES and HR |
| Ebner-Priemer (2008) | Individuals with BPD 50 (50:0), 31.3 ± 8.1 Healthy individuals 50 (50:0), 27.7 ± 6.8 | 1 day | Every 10–20 minutes (random) | PS (momentary) | Additive HR (10–20 minutes prior to prompt) | MLM | 5,410 | 52.3 (bpd) 55.9 (hp) (np) | Positive association between PS and HR in combined sample |
| Pieper (2007) | Teachers 73 (24:49) 46.7 ± 9.5 | 4 days | 14 per day between 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. (random) | ES (past hour) | HR (past 5–60 minute, on average 6.85 minutes) | MLM | 2,653 | 36.3 (64.8) | Positive association between ES and HR |
| Pollard (2007) | Women with premenopausal 26 (26:0), 39.0 ± 5.9 Women with postmenopausal 7 (7:0), 58.4 ± 4.4 | 2 days | 6 per day (fixed) | PS (past hour) | HR (momentary) | MLM | 376 | np (94.9) | Positive association between PS and HR in combined sample |
| Buckley (2004) | Vietnam combat veterans with PTSD 19 (0:19), 51.1 ± 3.3 Vietnam combat veterans without PTSD 17 (0:17), 53.4 ± 3.1 | 1 day | Every 20 minutes (fixed) | PS (momentary) | HR (momentary) | MLM | np | np | No association between PS and HR in combined sample |
| Hawkley (2003) | Undergraduate students 70 (np:np), np ± np | 1 day | Every 45–120 minutes (random) | AS (momentary) (every 45–120 min) | HR(momentary) (every 45–120 min) | MLM | 441 | np (90.0) | No association between AS and HR |
| Tsai (2003) | Women with normotensive 12 (12:0), 39.7 ± 7.7 | 1 day | Every 30 minutes from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. and every 60 minutes between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.(fixed) | PS (momentary) NA (momentary) | HR (momentary) | MLM | 1,249 | np | Positive association between NA and HR; no association between PS and HR |
| Carels (2000) | High emotional responsive 81 (41:40), np ± np Low emotional responsive 81 (36:45), np ± np | 1 day | 4 times per hour between 7 a.m.–11 p.m. and 2 times per hour between 11 p.m.–7 a.m.(random) | NA (momentary) | HR (momentary) | GEE | 8,359.2 | 51.6 (np) Number of waking hour prompts not reported | Positive association between NA and HR in combined sample |
| Kamarck (1998) | Fulltime workers living with a partner 120 (64:56), 35 ± np | 6 days | Every 45 minutes (fixed) | NA (momentary) AS (momentary) SS (momentary) | HR (momentary) (every 45 min) | MLM | 13,080 | np (99.0) | No association between NA and HR; positive association between AS and HR; no association between SS and HR |
PTSD: posttraumatic stress disorder; BPD: borderline personality disorder; HP: healthy participants; SS: social stress; NA: negative affect; PS: perceived stress; AS: activity-related stress; ES: event-related stress; HR: heart rate; MLM: multilevel modelling; GEE: generalized estimating equation; np: not provided.
Studies controlled for the effects of relevant time-invariant factors:
1age,
2sex,
3body shape factors (body-mass index/ waist-hip ratio),
4socioeconomic factors (education/ income/ employment status/ socioeconomic status, mother’s education),
5racial or minority-related factors (race, ethnicity, minority status),
6medication status,
7smoking status,
8health-related risk factors (general health/ psychopathology/ family history of hypertension/ cardiovascular risk factors/ hypertension diagnosis),
9sleep,
10menstrual cycle; and time-variant factors:
11posture,
12physical activity,
13substance use (intake of alcohol, nicotine, caffeine, or recreational drugs),
14food intake,
15medication use,
16temperature,
17talking,
18location,
19mood,
20presence of another person,
21time.
+: significant positive association; ~+: marginally significant positive association; ~-: marginally significant negative association; -: significant negative association; ∙: no association; np: not provided; marginal association means p < .1.
a These studies report on the same sample with different analyses.
b These studies report on the same sample with different analyses.
c These numbers are estimated based on average number of data entries.
d This number was inferred from the degrees of freedom reported.