Glynn Laura M, Christenfeld Nicholas, Gerin William
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, University of California, Irvine, 92626, USA.
Psychosom Med. 2002 Sep-Oct;64(5):714-26. doi: 10.1097/01.psy.0000031574.42041.23.
While most investigations of the link between blood pressure responses and later disease have focused on acute reactivity during stressful tasks, there is some theoretical and empirical reason to believe that examining recovery and later re-creations of BP responses may also be useful. Two experiments explored situational determinants of sustained BP elevations, examining whether the extent of recovery and the ability to later mentally recreate the response are influenced by the magnitude or emotionality of the initial task and also whether preventing rumination after a stressor has ended speeds recovery.
Experiment 1, with 72 normotensive male and female undergraduates, examined BP and heart rate before, during, and after a task and also before, during, and after the mental re-creation of that task. Four tasks were used, designed to produce high initial reactivity with an emotional component (mental arithmetic with harassment), low reactivity with emotion (shock avoidance), high reactivity without emotion (physical exercise), or low reactivity without emotion (cold pressor). Experiment 2, with 20 normotensive male and female undergraduates, compared the cardiovascular recovery of persons who were either given a distractor task or just sat quietly immediately after a mental arithmetic task.
Study 1 revealed that only the emotional tasks were associated with delayed BP recovery and elevations during later rumination. Blood pressure during recovery and later rumination was independent of the original reactivity. Experiment 2 found that participants with the distractor, who presumably could not ruminate, showed better BP recovery.
Situations that put people at risk may include not just those that cause large BP elevations, but also emotion-producing situations that lead to sustained and recurring elevations.
虽然大多数关于血压反应与后续疾病之间联系的研究都集中在压力任务期间的急性反应性上,但有一些理论和实证依据表明,研究血压反应的恢复情况以及随后再次产生的反应可能也很有用。两项实验探讨了持续性血压升高的情境决定因素,研究恢复程度以及随后在心理上再次产生该反应的能力是否会受到初始任务的强度或情感性的影响,以及在应激源结束后阻止反复思考是否能加速恢复。
实验1有72名血压正常的男女本科生参与,在一项任务进行前、进行期间和结束后,以及在心理上再次重现该任务的前、中、后,测量了血压和心率。使用了四项任务,设计目的是分别产生带有情感成分的高初始反应性(骚扰下的心算)、带有情感的低反应性(避免电击)、无情感的高反应性(体育锻炼)或无情感的低反应性(冷加压)。实验2有20名血压正常的男女本科生参与,比较了在心算任务后要么被给予一项分心任务要么只是静静坐着的人的心血管恢复情况。
研究1表明,只有情感任务与血压恢复延迟以及后续反复思考期间的血压升高有关。恢复期间和后续反复思考期间的血压与最初的反应性无关。实验2发现,有分心任务的参与者(推测无法反复思考)显示出更好的血压恢复情况。
使人们面临风险的情况可能不仅包括那些导致血压大幅升高的情况,还包括那些导致持续性和反复性血压升高的产生情感的情况。