Lumley M A, Torosian T, Ketterer M W, Pickard S D
Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan 48202, USA.
Psychosomatics. 1997 May-Jun;38(3):230-8. doi: 10.1016/S0033-3182(97)71459-2.
The authors examined historical, concurrent, and potentially secondary psychosocial problems related to noncardiac chest pain during exercise. The patients reporting chest pain during treadmill testing but who lacked cardiac ischemia (determined via nuclear scanning) were compared with the patients having both ischemia and chest pain, and with patients having neither ischemia nor chest pain. The noncardiac chest pain patients had the highest levels of 1) parental divorce and personal psychiatric treatment; 2) current depression, somatic awareness, and anger control; and 3) negative attitudes toward the health care system. The findings suggest that psychosocial problems predate, coexist with, and may result from noncardiac chest pain.