Center for Behavioral Cardiovascular Health, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.
Applied Behavioral Medicine Research Institute, Stony Brook University, New York, NY, USA.
Ann Behav Med. 2019 Mar 1;53(3):223-231. doi: 10.1093/abm/kay030.
People in high-quality romantic relationships tend to have lower blood pressure (BP). People may experience lower BP specifically when interacting with romantic partners.
This study parsed the effects of different types of social interactions on ambulatory BP (ABP) and tested whether romantic relationship satisfaction moderated these effects during interactions with partners in particular (specificity) or with others (spillover; e.g., friends, co-workers).
Partnered participants (N = 594) were drawn from a larger study on BP and cardiovascular health (age = 46.5 ± 9.3; 57.4% female). Participants reported on romantic relationship satisfaction and completed 24-hr ABP monitoring. At each reading, participants reported whether they had a social interaction and with whom. Multilevel models accounted for nesting of data over time.
Romantic relationship satisfaction significantly modified the effects of some social interactions on systolic and diastolic BP (SBP, DBP). Participants with high (+1 SD) relationship satisfaction had significantly lower SBP (-0.77 mmHg, p = .02) during partner interactions compared with no social interaction; low-satisfaction (-1 SD) participants had a nonsignificant 0.59 mmHg increase (p = .14). A similar pattern emerged for DBP. Relationship satisfaction also modified SBP response during friend interactions (elevated SBP for low-satisfaction participants) and DBP response during "other" interactions (elevated DBP for high-satisfaction participants).
Participants with high levels of romantic relationship satisfaction experienced significantly lower BP during social interactions with their partner compared with situations without social interaction. Although there was some evidence for spillover to other types of relationships, effects were largely restricted to partner interactions.
处于高质量浪漫关系中的人们往往血压(BP)较低。当人们与伴侣互动时,他们的血压可能会特别降低。
本研究分析了不同类型的社交互动对动态血压(ABP)的影响,并测试了浪漫关系满意度是否会调节与伴侣(特异性)或与他人(溢出;例如朋友、同事)互动时的这些影响。
从一项关于 BP 和心血管健康的更大研究中抽取了有伴侣的参与者(N = 594;年龄 = 46.5 ± 9.3;57.4%为女性)。参与者报告了浪漫关系满意度,并完成了 24 小时 ABP 监测。在每次读数时,参与者报告他们是否有社交互动以及与谁互动。多层次模型考虑了数据随时间的嵌套。
浪漫关系满意度显著改变了一些社交互动对收缩压和舒张压(SBP、DBP)的影响。与没有社交互动相比,满意度高(+1 SD)的参与者在与伴侣互动时 SBP 显著降低(-0.77mmHg,p =.02);满意度低(-1 SD)的参与者 SBP 升高 0.59mmHg,但无统计学意义(p =.14)。DBP 也出现了类似的模式。关系满意度还改变了朋友互动时的 SBP 反应(低满意度参与者的 SBP 升高)和“其他”互动时的 DBP 反应(高满意度参与者的 DBP 升高)。
与没有社交互动的情况相比,浪漫关系满意度高的参与者在与伴侣的社交互动中经历的血压明显降低。虽然有一些证据表明溢出到其他类型的关系,但影响主要限于伴侣互动。