Manuck S B, Kaplan J R, Adams M R, Clarkson T B
Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, PA 15260.
Am Heart J. 1988 Jul;116(1 Pt 2):328-33. doi: 10.1016/0002-8703(88)90110-x.
Epidemiologic evidence increasingly implicates psychosocial variables in the development of coronary heart disease in human beings, an association that appears to be independent of the effects of other coronary disease risk factors. It has been hypothesized that behavioral influences on coronary heart disease are mediated by activation of the sympathetic nervous system, perhaps through exacerbation of coronary artery atherosclerosis. This article summarizes several studies of the effects of stress and sympathetic arousal on atherosclerosis in a nonhuman primate model of atherogenesis. The application of a behavioral stressor involving periodic reorganization of social group memberships resulted in worsened coronary atherosclerosis among male cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) fed a cholesterol-containing diet, relative to control animals housed in groups of fixed (stable) membership, but only among those monkeys that retained dominant social status during the course of the study. This effect could not be attributed to concomitant variability in blood pressure or serum lipid concentrations. When the same experimental procedures were applied to males fed a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, the manipulation of group memberships similarly led to development of greater atherosclerosis in the coronary arteries. In related observations, monkeys that exhibited the largest heart rate responses to a standardized behavioral challenge had more extensive coronary atherosclerosis than animals showing a less pronounced cardiac responsivity to stress. In a final investigation, we observed that the exacerbated atherosclerosis of dominant monkeys consuming an atherogenic diet and housed in unstable social groups could be prevented by long-term administration of a beta-adrenoreceptor-blocking agent, propranolol hydrochloride.
越来越多的流行病学证据表明,社会心理因素与人类冠心病的发生有关,这种关联似乎独立于其他冠心病危险因素的影响。据推测,行为对冠心病的影响是通过交感神经系统的激活介导的,可能是通过加重冠状动脉粥样硬化来实现的。本文总结了在一个非人类灵长类动物动脉粥样硬化模型中,关于应激和交感神经兴奋对动脉粥样硬化影响的几项研究。相对于固定(稳定)群体饲养的对照动物,对雄性食蟹猴(猕猴)施加涉及定期重新组织社会群体成员的行为应激源,会导致喂食含胆固醇饮食的雄性食蟹猴冠状动脉粥样硬化恶化,但仅在研究过程中保持主导社会地位的那些猴子中出现这种情况。这种效应不能归因于血压或血脂浓度的伴随变化。当对喂食低饱和脂肪和胆固醇饮食的雄性动物应用相同的实验程序时,群体成员的操纵同样导致冠状动脉中出现更严重的动脉粥样硬化。在相关观察中,对标准化行为挑战表现出最大心率反应的猴子,比对应激表现出不太明显心脏反应性的动物有更广泛的冠状动脉粥样硬化。在最后一项研究中,我们观察到,长期给予β-肾上腺素受体阻滞剂盐酸普萘洛尔,可以预防食用致动脉粥样硬化饮食且生活在不稳定社会群体中的优势猴子的动脉粥样硬化加剧。