| Literature DB >> 35512885 |
Jaskanwal Deep Singh Sara1, Takumi Toya1, Ali Ahmad1, Matthew M Clark2, Wesley P Gilliam3, Lliach O Lerman3, Amir Lerman4.
Abstract
Coronary artery disease continues to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality despite significant advances in risk stratification and management. This has prompted the search for alternative nonconventional risk factors that may provide novel therapeutic targets. Psychosocial stress, or mental stress, has emerged as an important risk factor implicated in a higher incidence of cardiovascular events, and although our understanding of this far ranging and interesting phenomenon has developed greatly over recent times, there is still much to be learned regarding how to measure mental stress and how it may impact physical health. With the current coronavirus disease 2019 global pandemic and its incumbent lockdowns and social distancing, understanding the potentially harmful biological effects of stress related to life-changing events and social isolation has become even more important. In the current review our multidisciplinary team discusses stress from a psychosocial perspective and aims to define psychological stress as rigorously as possible; discuss the pathophysiologic mechanisms by which stress may mediate cardiovascular disease, with a particular focus to its effects on vascular health; outline existing methods and approaches to quantify stress by means of a vascular biomarker; outline the mechanisms whereby psychosocial stressors may have their pathologic effects ultimately transduced to the vasculature through the neuroendocrine immunologic axis; highlight areas for improvement to refine existing approaches in clinical research when studying the consequences of psychological stress on cardiovascular health; and discuss evidence-based therapies directed at reducing the deleterious effects of mental stress including those that target endothelial dysfunction. To this end we searched PubMed and Google Scholar to identify studies evaluating the relationship between mental or psychosocial stress and cardiovascular disease with a particular focus on vascular health. Search terms included "myocardial ischemia," "coronary artery disease," "mental stress," "psychological stress," "mental∗ stress∗," "psychologic∗ stress∗," and "cardiovascular disease∗." The search was limited to studies published in English in peer-reviewed journals between 1990 and the present day. To identify potential studies not captured by our database search strategy, we also searched studies listed in the bibliography of relevant publications and reviews.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35512885 PMCID: PMC9058928 DOI: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2022.02.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mayo Clin Proc ISSN: 0025-6196 Impact factor: 7.616
Figure 1Schematic outline of the relationship between acute and chronic stressors and stress defined as the individual response to challenge, stress’s dynamic interaction with extraneous bio-psycho-social factors, and beneficial and pathologic consequences of stress.
Summary of All Published Prospective Cohort Studies Evaluating the Relationship Between Experimentally Induced Mental Stress and Cardiovascular Outcomes, in Addition to Measurements of a Putative Mediating Pathologic Mechanisma
| Reference | Year | Sample size | Population | Follow-up duration | Experimental stressor | CV outcome | Putative mediating pathologic mechanism | No. of events | Principle finding | Other finding(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1992 | 13 (10) | Post MI | Average 57 mo (range: 39-64 mo) | Modified Stroop test on 2 occasions | Re-infarction and/or stroke | BP, HR, and venous plasma catecholamines | 5 | Patients with events had larger systolic and diastolic BP responses to Stroop test than patients who were event-free at follow-up | Catecholamine concentrations differed between groups during MS, but on only 1 of the 2 test days | |
| Groups did not differ on baseline measurements, CV response to exercise testing, fasting serum lipid and glucose concentrations, age, or duration of follow-up | ||||||||||
| 1995 | 30 (30) | Stable angina pectoris and ischemia on stress MPI | 2 y | Mental arithmetic testing | Nonfatal MI, unstable angina | Continuous ambulatory LV function monitoring | 14 (4 nonfatal MIs, 10 unstable angina) | 15 developed transient LV dysfunction during MS | ||
| At 2-year follow-up, 10 of 15 patients (67%) with MS-induced LV dysfunction had adverse events compared with only 4 of 15 (27%) with no MS-induced LV dysfunction ( | ||||||||||
| 1996 | 126 (112) | Documented CAD and exercise-induced myocardial ischemia | Mean/median 44 mo | Mental arithmetic, public speaking, mirror trace, reading, and type A structured interview | Hospitalization, cardiac revascularization, MI, cardiac death | RNV imaging and 48-h Holter monitor | 28 (2 cardiac deaths, 4 nonfatal MIs, 10 CABG, 17 angioplasty — 6 had multiple events) | Baseline MS-induced ischemia was associated with significantly higher rates of cardiac events (OR, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.0-7.7; | The RR for ECG-defined ischemia during exercise testing was 1.9 (95% CI, 0.95-3.96; | |
| LVEF change during MS was significantly related to event-free survival (RR, 2.4; 95% CI, 1. 12-5. 14; | ||||||||||
| This relationship remained significant after controlling for ECG-defined ischemia during exercise (RR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.01-4.81; | ||||||||||
| 1999 | 79 (76) | CAD as confirmed by previous MI or coronary angiography or a 90% probability of CAD determined by Bayesian analysis | Median 3.5 y (range: 2.7 to 7.3 y) | Mental arithmetic and a simulated public speech stress | Cardiac death, nonfatal MI, or revascularization procedures | New or worsened ischemic wall motion abnormalities were monitored using echocardiography or RNV | 28 (5 cardiac deaths, 9 MIs, 9 CABGs, and 5 angioplasties) | New or worsened LV wall motion abnormalities occurred in 61 patients (77%) | After controlling for baseline BP and study group status (echocardiography vs RNV), there was a higher RR of subsequent events for patients with high vs low peak stress-induced diastolic BP response (RR, 2.4; 95% CI, 1.1-5.2; | |
| Peak changes in BP and HR | Survival analysis showed that 20 of 45 patients with MS-ischemia (44%) experienced new cardiac events vs those without MS ischemia (8 of 34; 23%; | |||||||||
| Type of cardiac event did not differ between MS ischemia– positive vs – negative patients | ||||||||||
| 2002 | 196 (170) | CAD (>50% narrowing in at least 1 major coronary artery or verified MI, or evidence of myocardial ischemia on an exercise treadmill test conducted off anti-ischemic medications) | Average 5.2±0.4 y (range: 5.2±0.4 y) | Speech on an assigned topic | Cardiac death | Bicycle exercise and MS testing with RNV imaging | 17 deaths | Of the 17 participants who died, new or worsened wall motion abnormalities during MS were present in 40% vs 19% of survivors ( | EF changes during MS were similar in patients who died and in survivors ( | |
| Other indicators of ischemia during MS (ST-segment depression, chest pain) did not predict death, nor did psychological traits, hemodynamic responses to MS, or markers of the presence and severity of ischemia during daily life and exercise | ||||||||||
| 2010 | 138 (96) | Patients with stable CAD | Median 5.9 y | Mirror tracing and public speaking | Combined end point of MI and all-cause mortality | Ischemia on R-wave-synchronized, gated equilibrium RNV | 32 (17 nonfatal MIs and 15 deaths) | Of the 26 patients who exhibited myocardial ischemia during MS, 11 (42%) sustained subsequent clinical events, compared with 21 of 112 patients (19%) who showed no MS-induced ischemia | LVEF change during MS was related to the clinical events in a graded, continuous fashion, with each 4% decrease from the LVEF at rest associated with an adjusted HR of 1.7 (95% CI, 1.1-2.6, | |
| 2012 | 431 (229 females) | West of Scotland Twenty-07 Population Study | 16 y | Mental arithmetic test | CV mortality | Systolic and diastolic Blood Pressure response | Both systolic and diastolic blood pressure reactions were positively associated with CV mortality | |||
| 2012 | 1470 (746 males) | 1995 Nova Scotia Health Survey Population Based Study | 10 y | Interpersonally stressful interview designed to elicit anger and MS by asking participants about their characteristic responses to a variety of different situations | Fatal or non-fatal CV disease events | Systolic and diastolic BP response | 161 nonfatal and 10 fatal CV disease events | In an unadjusted model, those in the highest decile of systolic BP reactivity were more than twice as likely to have an incident CVD event vs those in the decile with no reactivity (HR, 2.33; 95% CI, 1.15-4.69; | After adjusting for age and sex, and then also for FRS, BMI, and education, this relationship was attenuated and not statistically significant | |
| Diastolic BP reactivity was not associated with CVD incidence in any model | ||||||||||
| 2015 | 100 (74) | Systolic HF | Median 48.5 mo | Structured public speech task | Mortality | BP and HR responses to MS | 31 deaths | Mortality rates were 2 times higher (HR, 2.04; 95% CI, 1.15-3.60; | Multivariate analyses showed that a high heart rate response (>6.3 beats/min) to acute MS was associated with a reduced mortality risk (HR, 0.40; 95% CI, 0.16 to 1.00; | |
| [31 patients had died (31%)] | High diastolic BP reactivity (mean = 16.3 ± 3.4 mm Hg) was not related to mortality (HR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.55-1.66) | |||||||||
| Systolic BP responses showed a similar but nonsignificant association | ||||||||||
| 2017 | 224 (187) | Clinically stable CAD, NYHA functional class I | Median 4 y | Mental arithmetic, mirror tracing and anger recall public speech | Composite events that comprised all-cause mortality and/or nonfatal CV events, resulting in an unplanned hospitalization | MAV, specifically, diastolic early (e'), diastolic late (a'), and systolic (s') velocities | 86 patients experienced at least 1 composite event(s) | MS-induced changes in e' (HR, 0.73) and s' (HR, 0 .73) were significant ( | Patients with a greater decrease in e' and/or s' velocity had a higher probability of experiencing a composite event, and the association of the change in a' and composite events was marginal ( | |
| 2017 | 310 (257) | Stable adults with documented IHD | Median 4 y (maximum 6 y) | Mental arithmetic, mirror tracing, and anger recall public speech | First and total rate of MACE, defined as | Development or worsening of any wall motion abnormality, reduction of LVEF ≥ 8%, or ischemic ST-segment change on ECG (horizontal or downsloping depression ≥ 1 mm in two or more leads | 125 patients had at least 1 MACE (18 deaths, 220 hospitalizations due to CV causes including 24 nonfatal MIs, 81 unstable anginas, and 31 HF exacerbations) | The continuous variable of MS-induced LVEF change was significantly associated with both endpoints (all | Indices of exercise-induced myocardial ischemia did not predict endpoints | |
| all-cause mortality and hospitalizations for CV causes | For every reduction of 5% in LVEF induced by MS, patients had a 5% increase in the probability of a MACE at the median follow-up time and a 20% increase in the number of MACE endured over the follow-up period of 6 y | The incidence of MACE in MSIMI group was 9.85% higher than those without ( | ||||||||
| All-cause mortality was 7.46% with MSIMI and 7.14% with exercise induced myocardial ischemia ( | ||||||||||
| 2017 | 199 (135) | Outpatients diagnosed with HF, with EF ≤40% | Median 5 y | Public speaking task | Combined end point of death or CV hospitalization | Systolic and diastolic BP and HR reactivity | 155 first events (72 CV hospitalizations, and 83 deaths) | Both systolic and diastolic BP reactivity, quantified as continuous variables, were inversely related to risk of death or CV hospitalization ( | For diastolic BP, high reactivity was marginally associated with lower risk compared with intermediate reactivity (HR, 0 .767; 95% CI, .515-1.14; | |
| High systolic BP reactivity, compared with intermediate systolic BP reactivity, was associated with lower risk (HR, 0.498; 95% CI, .335-.742; | No relationship of heart rate reactivity to outcome was identified | |||||||||
| 2019 | 549 (417) | Stable CAD | 3 y | Standardized public speaking stressor | CV death, MI, revascularization, and hospitalization for HF | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline: | 24 all-cause deaths, 14 CV deaths, 24 MIs, 66 coronary revascularizations, 20 HF hospitalizations | After adjusting for demographic and CV risk factors, medications, and rate-pressure product change during MS, those with low stress PAT ratio were at significantly higher risk of adverse outcomes (HR, 1.77; 95% CI, 1.12-2.80) | ||
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | ||||||||||
| Median ratio was 0.68 (IQR, 0.48-0.88), indicating 32% vasoconstriction with MS | ||||||||||
| 2019 | 569 (420) | Stable CAD | Median (IQR): 3.0 (2.9-3.1) y | Standardized public speaking stressor | Composite endpoint including CV death, MI, and unstable angina leading to revascularization and HF hospitalization | FMD was measured before and 30 min after MS | 74 patients experienced MACE (13 CV deaths, 15 MIs, 34 unstable angina, 12 hospitalizations for HF) | 360 participants (63.3%) developed transient PED (a decrease in FMD) | Risk discrimination statistics showed a significant model improvement after addition of either post-stress FMD (change in the AUC, 0.05; 95% CI, 0.01-0.09) or pre-stress plus change in FMD (change in the AUC, 0.04; 95% CI, 0.00-0.08) compared with conventional risk factors | |
| Transient PED with MS was associated with a 78% increase (HR, 1.78; 95% CI, 1.15-2.76) in the incidence of MACE | ||||||||||
| Both the change in FMD (post – pre HR, 1.15; 95% CI, 1.03-1.27 for each 1% decline) and post-MS FMD (HR, 1.14 ;[95% CI, 1.04-1.24 for each 1% decline) were associated with MACE | ||||||||||
| 2020 | 148 (102) | Participants with stable CAD | Median 3 y | Series of standardized speech/arithmetic stressors | MACE - composite of CV death, MI, unstable angina with revascularization and HF hospitalization | Simultaneous brain imaging with high-resolution PET: rmPFC activation | 34 patients experienced MACE (2 CV deaths, 1 MI, 5 hospitalizations for HF, 26 cases of unstable angina with revascularization) | Each increase of 1 SD in rmPFC activation with MS was associated with a 21% increased risk of MACE (HR, 1.21; 95% CI, 1.08-1.37) | MS-induced IL-6 and high-frequency heart rate variability explained 15.5% and 32.5% of the relationship between rmPFC reactivity and MACE, respectively | |
| IL-6 levels 90 min after stress | After adjustment for baseline demographics, risk factors, and baseline levels of IL-6 and high-frequency Heart Rate variability, higher rmPFC stress reactivity was independently associated with higher IL-6 and lower high-frequency HR variability with MS | Addition of rmPFC reactivity to conventional risk factors improved risk reclassification for MACE prediction, and C-statistic improved from 0.71 to 0.76 ( | ||||||||
| High-frequency HR variability during MS | ||||||||||
| 2020 | 148 (102) | Participants with stable CAD | 2 y | Series of standardized speech/arithmetic stressors | Angina (assessed with the Seattle Angina Questionnaire's angina frequency subscale) | High resolution PET imaging of the brain: blood flow to the inferior frontal lobe was evaluated as a ratio compared with whole brain flow for each scan | 54 patients experienced angina at follow-up (35 monthly, 19 daily or weekly) | For every doubling in the inferior frontal lobe activation, angina frequency was increased by 13.7 units at baseline (95% CI, 6.3-21.7; | MS-induced ischemia and activation of other brain pain processing regions (thalamus, insula, and amygdala) accounted for 40.0% and 13.1% of the total effect of inferior frontal lobe activation on angina severity, respectively | |
| 2020 | 562 (427) | Participants with stable CAD | Median 3 y | Standardized public speaking stressor | MACE was defined as a composite endpoint of CV death, MI, unstable angina with revascularization, and HF | IL-6, MCP-1, and MMP-9 | 71 patients experienced MACE (14 CV death, 22 MI, 19 HF, and 35 unstable angina with revascularization) | There was no significant association between inflammatory response to stress and risk of MACE | There were sex-based interactions for IL-6 ( | |
| Risk of MACE increased 56% (HR, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.21-2.01; | ||||||||||
| 2020 | 417 (383) | Patients hospitalized for ACS and received percutaneous coronary intervention | 1 y | Three different MS tasks of 6-min duration in random order (number-letter recall challenge of increasing length and complexity; number subtraction; Stroop word-color conflict) | A composite of ACS, rehospitalization, stroke, revascularization, CV death, and all-cause mortality | RH-PAT at baseline (baseline PEF) compared with RH-PAT following MS (post-MS PEF) | 82 MACE events (63 cardiac rehospitalizations, 49 revascularizations, 3 MIs) | Women were more likely to experience MACE in the year following ACS (RR, 2.42; 95% CI, 1.53-3.84; | In multivariate analyses stratified by sex, baseline PED (EndoPAT<1.7) (χ=8.0, | |
| PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline: | ||||||||||
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline |
ACS, acute coronary syndrome; AUC, area under the curve; BMI, body mass index; BP, blood pressure; CAD, coronary artery disease; CABG, coronary artery bypass graft; CV, cardiovascular; ECG, electrocardiogram; EF, ejection fraction; FMD, flow-mediated dilatation; FRS, Framingham risk score; HF, heart failure; IL, interleukin; IHD, ischemic heart disease; LV, left ventricle; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular event; MAV, myocardial annular velocity; MCP-1, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1; MI, myocardial infarction; MMP-9, matrix metalloproteinase 9; MPI, myocardial perfusion imaging; MS, mental stress; MSIMI, mental stress induced myocardial ischemia; NYHA, New York Heart Association; PAT, peripheral arterial tonometry; PEF, peripheral endothelial function; PET, positron emission tomography; RH-PAT, reactive hyperemia peripheral arterial tonometry; rmPFC, Rostromedial prefrontal cortex; RNV, radionuclide ventriculography
Summary of All Published Cross-Sectional Studies Evaluating the Relationship Between Experimentally Induced Mental Stress and Peripheral Vascular Reactivitya
| Reference | Year | Sample size | Population | Experimental stressor | Measure of peripheral vascular reactivity | Other measures | Principle finding | Other finding(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | 40 (21) | Healthy adults aged 25–44 y | Reaction time/shock avoidance, mirror trace, and anger interview | Brachial artery endothelial function measured by ultrasonography in response to RH (FMD) | BP and SVR | A high EDAD was associated with lower resting systolic and diastolic BP | SVR responses during MS testing were greater for individuals with lower EDAD responses | |
| EDAD was not associated to BP response to MS | ||||||||
| 2000 | 18 (18) | 10 healthy males; 8 non–insulin-dependent diabetic males | Structured speech task | Brachial artery endothelial function measured by ultrasonography in response to RH (FMD) | Endothelial-independent function following infusion of nitroglycerin | In healthy subjects, FMD (5.0±2.1%) was significantly ( | Diabetic subjects had lower FMD than controls (3.0±1.5% vs 5.0±2.1%, respectively; | |
| MS had no effect on the response to GTN | ||||||||
| In studies without MS, FMD did not change | ||||||||
| 2002 | 23 | Healthy subjects without CV risk factors | Colored light response | Brachial artery endothelial function measured by ultrasonography in response to RH (FMD) | FMD before and after MS during intra-arterial infusion of a selective endothelin A receptor antagonist (BQ-123) | Endothelium-dependent vasodilation was reduced by half for about 45 min (8.0±1.1% vs 4.1±1.0%; | Intra-arterial infusion of the selective endothelin-A receptor antagonist, but not saline prevented the impairment of endothelium-dependent vasodilation (8.6±1.2 versus 9.4±1.3%; NS) | |
| Endothelial-independent function following infusion of nitroglycerin | remained unaffected (15.6±1.6 vs 14.3±1.3%; NS) | Intra-arterial infusion of norepinephrine of similar duration as MS did not inhibit FMD | ||||||
| 2004 | 16 (16) | Previously diagnosed CAD with positive exercise tress tests | Mental arithmetic stress test with harassment | PAT measurements during MS compared to baseline | ERNA | In 8 patients both ERNA and PAT were abnormal | When considering an abnormal PAT tracing as indicative of MSIMI, concordance of the 2 methods was 88% | |
| Considered abnormal when PAT decreased by ≥20% from baseline | Myocardial ischemia diagnosed when global EF fell ≥8% during MS or new/worsened focal wall motion abnormalities | In 6 patients both tests were negative | ||||||
| In 2 cases results were discordant | ||||||||
| 2006 | 16 (0) | Postmenopausal women with angina and normal coronary angiogram | Anger recall task (an incident that made patients angry and that involved interpersonal interactions) | Brachial artery endothelial function measured by ultrasonography in response to RH (FMD) | Technetium 99m methoxyisobutylisonitrile myocardial scintigraphy at rest, MS and exercise | During MS testing, 6 patients (group I) had reversible perfusion defects on myocardial scintigraphy; other 10 patients (group II) did not | No group I patients had ischemia on Holter monitoring; 2 of 10 group II patients had ischemia | |
| 24-h ambulatory ECG recording (Holter monitor) | Group I patients exhibited PED more frequently than those in group II (83% vs 20%) | |||||||
| Myocardial scintigraphy showed anteroapical/septal ischemia in 5 patients and inferoapical ischemia in 1 other patient, with both types of stress | ||||||||
| In group II patients, none showed a reversible perfusion defect during physical or MS | ||||||||
| 2008 | 211 (134) | Patients with established stable CAD | Public speaking task | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | BP and heart rate were recorded during rest and MS | Stress PAT ratio was significantly higher in women (0.80±0.72) compared with men (0.59±0.48), | MS induced significant changes in systolic BP, diastolic BP, heart rate, and double product compared with rest in all subjects, | |
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | Remained significant after controlling for confounders, | Comparing hemodynamic responses with MS across sexes did not show differences in systolic BP, diastolic BP, heart rate, or double product | ||||||
| 2008 | 87 (34) | Healthy subjects | Three different MS tasks of 6-min duration in random order (number-letter recall challenge of increasing length and complexity; number subtraction; Stroop word-color conflict) | RH-PAT at baseline (baseline PEF) compared with RH-PAT following MS (post-MS PEF) | In response to MS, male subjects had an increase in RH-PAT compared with baseline RH-PAT compared with females, who showed a decline in PEF (13.7% vs −0.47%; | Double product (systolic BP × heart rate) | Males had a greater double product response to MS (27.2+3.6% increase in double product vs 19.2+1.7%; | |
| PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | Stress PAT ratio tended to be greater in males than females (0.79±0.07 vs 0.9±0.04, respectively; | |||||||
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | Females who showed the least vasoreactivity to MS showed the greatest decline in PEF (−10.5+4% vs 17.4 + 6.3%; | |||||||
| 2009 | 68 (60) | Patients with established stable CAD | Anger recall periods | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | Single PET-CT MPI concurrent with PAT testing during MS protocol | 26 developed a new perfusion defect during MS | Sensitivity/specificity of PAT ratio as an index of ischemia on PET-CT MPI was 0.62/0.63 | |
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | Patients with a new perfusion defect with MS had a lower stress PAT ratio (0.76±0.04 vs 0.91±0.05, | Among patients taking ACE-I the sensitivity and specificity increased to 0.86 and 0.73, respectively | ||||||
| 90% of patients without ischemia were correctly identified | ||||||||
| 2009 | 211 (134) | Patients with established stable CAD | Two phases of a public speaking task (stress anticipation and task performance) | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | Rest-stress MPI | Vascular response in the anticipation period (speech preparation) was more pronounced than during the actual speaking task | Stress PAT ratio during speech preparation had modest accuracy for predicting MSIMI on MPI(AUC, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.53-0.74; | |
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | Mean preparation stress PAT ratio 0.64±0.53; mean speech stress PAT ratio 0.72±0.60; | |||||||
| 2010 | 26 (0) | 12 females with a history of ABS; 12 post-menopausal controls; 4 with history of MI | Three different MS tasks of 6-min duration in random order (number-letter recall challenge of increasing length and complexity; number subtraction; Stroop word-color conflict) | RH-PAT at baseline (baseline PEF) compared with RH-PAT following MS (post-MS PEF) | Plasma catecholamine levels at baseline and following MS tests | RH-PAT following MS was lower in patients with ABS vs with post-menopausal controls ( | Catecholamine levels were increased in patients with ABS vs in post-menopausal controls, following MS testing ( | |
| PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | Stress PAT ratios were lower in patients with ABS vs with patients with MI and post-menopausal controls ( | |||||||
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | No differences in stress PAT ratio in patients with MI vs post-menopausal controls | |||||||
| 2011 | 25 (6) | Healthy subjects | Three different MS tasks of 6-min duration in random order (number-letter recall challenge of increasing length and complexity; number subtraction; Stroop word-color conflict) | RH-PAT at baseline (baseline PEF) compared with RH-PAT following MS (post-MS PEF) | Arterial blood pressure signal amplitude using cuff attached to a pressure transducer (BIOPAC MP150 systems technology — a standard polygraph device used to detect deception during polygraph examinations in military or law enforcement applications) | No significant difference in RH-PAT and BIOPAC arterial blood pressure signal amplitude at rest or following MS (1.55±0.36 and 1.48±0.19; | Lower stress PAT ratio vs BIOPAC stress ratio during each of the 3 MS tasks | |
| PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | Ratio of BIOPAC arterial blood pressure signal amplitude during MS to baseline arterial blood pressure signal amplitude | No differences in RH-PAT ratios between male and female subjects ( | No difference in stress PAT ratios between male and female subjects ( | |||||
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | ||||||||
| 2011 | 241 (126) | Healthy adolescents (mean age, 10 y) | Three different MS tasks of 6-min duration in random order (number-letter recall challenge of increasing length and complexity; number subtraction; Stroop word-color conflict) | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | Physical activity using a self-report questionnaire | In response to MS, male adolescents had a more vasoconstrictive response, followed by a less vasodilatory response, and needed longer time to return to baseline level than females | Adolescents who reported decreased physical activity over a 3-y period had increased arterial stiffness | |
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | ||||||||
| 2013 | 384 (159) | Patients with angiographically documented CAD | Standardized public speaking task | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | 99mTc-sestamibi MPI at rest and following both MS and physical stress testing, performed on separate days | Stress PAT ratio was lower in those with vs without MSIMI on MPI (0.55±0.36 vs 0.76±0.52; | CAD severity and extent scores were not significantly different between those with or without MSIMI, whereas they were greater in those with compared with without physical stress induced ischemia ( | |
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | In a multivariable analysis, stress PAT ratio was the only independent predictor of MSIMI on MPI ( | Angiographic severity and extent of CAD independently predicted physical stress induced myocardial ischemia | ||||||
| 2017 | 660 (482) | Patients with established stable CAD | Standardized public speaking task | RH-PAT at baseline (baseline PEF) compared with RH-PAT following MS (post-MS PEF) | 99mTc sestamibi MPI at rest, with MS, and with conventional (exercise/pharmacological) stress | 106 (16.1%) developed MSIMI, and 229 (34.7%) had conventional stress-induced myocardial ischemia | Only presence of ischemia during conventional stress (OR, 7.1; 95% CI, 4.2-11.9), high hemodynamic response (OR for RPP response ≥ vs < ROC cutoff of 1.8; 95% CI, 1.1-2.8), and high digital vasoconstriction (OR for stress PAT ratio < vs ≥ ROC cutoff of 2.1; 95% CI, 1.3-3.3) were independent predictors of MSIMI | |
| Pulse wave velocity using PAT measurements | Rate-pressure-product (heart rate × systolic blood pressure) epinephrine levels | MS was associated with increases in SBP, DBP, HR, epinephrine levels, PWV, and significant decreases in FMD and stress PAT ratio denoting microvascular constriction | ||||||
| PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | Patients with vs without MSIMI had higher hemodynamic and digital vasoconstrictive responses ( | |||||||
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | ||||||||
| Endothelium-dependent FMD before and after MS | ||||||||
| 2018 | 62 (0) | 41 patients with coronary vascular dysfunction and 21 controls | Anger recall, mental arithmetic, and forehead cold pressor challenge | RH-PAT at baseline (baseline PEF) compared with RH-PAT following MS (post-MS PEF) | Emotional arousal was measured (Likert scale) | During MS 10% of controls reported chest pain vs 41% of subjects with coronary vascular dysfunction ( | Vasoconstriction inversely correlated with anxiety (r=-3.4, | |
| PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | RH-PAT did not change significantly after MS in either group | |||||||
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | Subjects with coronary vascular dysfunction had lower stress PAT ratios vs controls during mental arithmetic (0.54; 95% CI, 0.15-1.46 vs 0.67; 95% CI, 0.36-1.8; | |||||||
| 2018 | 418 (210) | 306 (150 females) subjects who were hospitalized for MI in the previous 8 months | Standardized public speaking task | RH-PAT at baseline (baseline PEF) compared with RH-PAT following MS (post-MS PEF) | 99mTc-sestamibi MPI at rest, with MS and conventional (exercise/pharmacological) stress | Women in both groups showed a higher stress PAT ratio and a lower RH-PAT index after MS indicating enhanced microvascular dysfunction after MS | Rate of MSIMI was twice as high in women as in men (22% vs 11%, | |
| 112 community controls (58 females) frequency matched for sex and age | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | No sex differences in FMD with MS | Stress PAT ratio and RH-PAT index after MS were predictive of MSIMI in women only | |||||
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | ||||||||
| Endothelium-dependent FMD before and after MS | ||||||||
| 2018 | 678 (492) | Patients with established stable CAD | Standardized public speaking task | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | MPI before and during MS | Women (but not men) with vs without MSIMI had a significantly lower stress PAT ratio (0.5 vs 0.8) | Men (but not women) with vs without MSIMI had a higher rate-pressure product response (6500 vs 4800 mm Hg beats/min) | |
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | SBP × HR – rate pressure product | Each 0.10-U decrease in stress PAT ratio was associated with 0.23% (95% CI, 0.11-0.35) increase in inducible myocardial ischemia in women | Each 1000-U increase in rate-pressure product response was associated with 0.32% (95% CI, 0.22-0.42) increase in inducible ischemia among men | |||||
| Ratios <1 indicate vasoconstrictive response | ||||||||
| 2018 | 38 (32) | Patients with stable CAD defined by an abnormal coronary angiogram demonstrating angiographic evidence of atherosclerosis with at least luminal irregularities | Mental arithmetic testing | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | Invasive endothelium-dependent and endothelium-independent coronary epicardial and microvascular responses were measured using intracoronary acetylcholine and nitroprusside, respectively, and after MS | MS increased the rate-pressure product by 22% (±23%) and constricted epicardial coronary arteries by median, -5.9%; IQR, -0.5% to -2.6%; | Stress PAT ratio correlated with the demand-adjusted change in CBF during MS ( | |
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | Acetylcholine increased CBF by 38.5% (8.1%, 91.3%), | |||||||
| MS-induced CBF response correlated with endothelium-dependent CBF changes with acetylcholine ( | ||||||||
| 2019 | 18 (0) | 8 females with a history of ABS; 10 post-menopausal controls | Three different MS tasks of 6-min duration in random order (number-letter recall challenge of increasing length and complexity; number subtraction; Stroop word-color conflict) | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | Pain induced PAT ratio | Stress PAT ratio was lower in | Pain-induced PAT ratios were attenuated in patients with ABS: | |
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | patients with ABS: Stroop test (0.79±0.30 vs 1.24±0.43; | at baseline (0.94±0.08 vs 1.30±0.54; | ||||||
| Arithmetic test (0.91±0.27 vs 1.36±0.57, | Pain-induced PAT ratios correlated significantly with stress PAT ratios, both in arithmetic and Stroop test ( | |||||||
| 2019 | 59 (44) | Patients with a history of stable CAD | Mental arithmetic testing, and public speaking stressors | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | PET imaging of the brain | Stress response ratios below the median were associated with increased stress activation in insula and parietal cortex, and decreased activation in the medial prefrontal cortex with MS tasks compared with control tasks | ||
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | ||||||||
| 2020 | 486 (350) | Patients with stable coronary atherosclerosis | Series of standardized speech/arithmetic stressors | PAT measurements during MS compared with baseline | 99mTc-sestamibi MPI at rest, with MS, and with conventional (exercise/pharmacological) stress | After multivariable adjustment MSIMI was associated with 21% and 20% slower completion of Trail-A and Trail-B, respectively ( | Ischemia with a conventional stress test was not associated with any of the cognitive tests over time | |
| Stress PAT response ratio: pulse wave amplitude during MS/at baseline | Cognitive function assessed at baseline and at a 2-y follow-up using Trail Making Test parts A and B, and the verbal and visual memory subtests of the Wechsler Memory Scale | After a 2-y follow-up period, presence of MSIMI was associated with a 33% slower completion of Trail-B, denoting cognitive decline (B = 0.33; 95% CI, 0.04-0.62) | ||||||
| A lower stress PAT ratio, indicating greater vasoconstriction, mediated the association between MSIMI and worsening Trail-B performance by 18.2% |
ABS, apical ballooning syndrome; ACE-I, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor; AUC, area under the curve; BP, blood pressure; CAD, coronary artery disease; CBF, coronary blood flow; CT, computed tomography; CV, cardiovascular; ECG, electrocardiogram; EDAD, endothelial-dependent arterial dilatation; EF, ejection fraction; ERNA, equilibrium radionucleotide angiocardiography; FMD, flow-mediated dilatation; GTN, sublingual glyceryl trinitrate; MI, myocardial infarction; MPI, myocardial perfusion imaging; MS, mental stress; MSIMI, mental stress–induced myocardial ischemia; NS, not significant; OR, odds ratio; PAT, peripheral arterial tonometry; PEF, peripheral endothelial function; PET, positron emission tomography; PWV, pulse wave velocity; RH-PAT, reactive hyperemia peripheral arterial tonometry; ROC, receiver operating characteristic curve; RPP, rate pressure product; SVR, systemic vascular resistance
Figure 2Outline of the various mechanisms by which stress pathologically affects vascular health (in boxes), and biomarkers available to measure these effects.
CBF, coronary blood flow; CRP, C-reactive protein; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; FMD, flow-mediated dilatation; H-P-A axis, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis; HR, heart rate; IL, interleukin; LV, left ventricular; MS, mental stress; MSIMI, mental stress induced myocardial ischemia; NF-κβ; nuclear factor kappa light chain enhancer of activated B cells; PP, pulse pressure; RH-PAT, reactive hyperemia – peripheral arterial tonometry; SBP, systolic blood pressure; SVR, systemic vascular resistance; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.
Figure 3Outline of how mental stress (MS) leads to microvascular and macrovascular endothelial dysfunction (ED), how each of these can lead to pathologic and clinical manifestations of cardiovascular (CV) disease that can be measured, and how ED could be used as a diagnostic and therapeutic target when managing MS and its associated risk of CV disease.
CIMT, carotid intima media thickness; PAT, peripheral arterial tonometry; RH-PAT, reactive hyperemia–peripheral arterial tonometry.