Holt-Lunstad Julianne, Jones Brandon Q, Birmingham Wendy
Brigham Young University, Department of Psychology, 1024 Spencer W. Kimball Tower, Provo, UT 84602-5543, USA.
Int J Psychophysiol. 2009 Mar;71(3):211-7. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2008.09.008. Epub 2008 Oct 5.
This study examined the influence of relationship-specific dimensions of social support (i.e., support, depth, conflict) on nocturnal blood pressure (BP) dipping and mental health (i.e., satisfaction with life, stress, and depression) among 303 normotensive and un-medicated hypertensive males and females ages 20-68. Results revealed that support was associated with better, and conflict with poorer, mental health; however, neither was associated with BP dipping. In contrast, relationship depth was associated with greater life satisfaction and greater systolic and diastolic BP dipping, and the effect on dipping was independent of sleep quality, age, hypertensive status, marital status, and level of perceived network support. Relationship conflict was moderated by marital status and gender. Low conflict for females, or with one's spouse, is associated with greater nocturnal diastolic BP dipping. Overall, this study found an association between close relationships and BP dipping, thus identifying one virtually unexplored mechanism by which close relationships may have a protective influence on health.
本研究调查了社会支持中特定关系维度(即支持、亲密度、冲突)对303名年龄在20 - 68岁之间的血压正常且未接受药物治疗的男性和女性夜间血压下降情况以及心理健康(即生活满意度、压力和抑郁)的影响。结果显示,支持与更好的心理健康相关,冲突与较差的心理健康相关;然而,二者均与夜间血压下降无关。相比之下,关系亲密度与更高的生活满意度以及更大幅度的收缩压和舒张压下降相关,并且对血压下降的影响独立于睡眠质量、年龄、高血压状态、婚姻状况以及感知到的网络支持水平。关系冲突受到婚姻状况和性别的调节。女性或与配偶之间冲突较低与更大幅度的夜间舒张压下降相关。总体而言,本研究发现亲密关系与血压下降之间存在关联,从而确定了一种几乎未被探索的机制,通过该机制亲密关系可能对健康产生保护作用。