313
Views
6
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Article

Cardiovascular psychophysiology

Pages 329-335 | Published online: 08 Jul 2009

References

  • Karasek R A. Job demands, job decision latitude, and mental health: implications for job redesign. Adm Sci Quarterly 1979; 24: 285–308
  • Karasek R A, Baker D, Marxer F, Ahlbom A, Theorell T. Job decison latitude, job demands, and cardiovascular disease: a prospective study of Swedish men. Am J Public Health 1981; 71: 694–705
  • Theorell T, Tsutsumi A, Hallquist J, Reuterwall C, Hogstedt C, Fredlund P, et al. Decision latitude, job strain, and myocardial infarction: a study of working men in Stockholm. The SHEEP Study Group. Stockholm Heart Epidemiology Program. Am J Public Health 1998; 88: 382–8
  • Schnall P L, Landsbergis P A, Baker D. Job strain and cardiovascular disease. Annu Rev Public Health 1994; 15: 381–411
  • Schnall P L, Pieper C, Schwartz J E, Karasek R A, Schlussel Y, Devereux R B, et al. The relationship between ‘job strain,’ workplace diastolic blood pressure, and left ventricular mass index. Results of a case-control study. JAMA 1990; 263(14)1929–35
  • Schnall P L, Schwartz J E, Landsbergis P A, Warren K, Pickering T G. A longitudinal study of job strain and ambulatory blood pressure: results from a three-year follow-up. Psychosom Med 1998; 60(6)697–706
  • Bosma H, Peter R, Siegrist J, Marmot M. Two alternative job stress models and the risk of coronary heart disease. Am J Public Health 1998; 88: 68–74
  • Orth-Gomér K, Rosengren A, Wilhelmsen L. Lack of social support and incidence of coronary heart disease in middle-aged Swedish men. Psychosom Med 1993; 55: 37–43
  • Bosma H, Marmot M G, Hemingway H, Nicholson A C, Brunner E, Stansfeld S A. Low job control and risk of coronary heart disease in Whitehall II (prospective cohort) study. EMJ 1997; 314(7080)558–65
  • Siegrist J. Adverse health effects of high effort-low reward conditions. J Occup Health Psychol 1996; 1: 27–37
  • Gentry W D, Chesney A P, Gary H E, Jr, Hall R P, Harburg E A. Habitual anger-coping styles: I. Effect on mean blood pressure and risk for essential hypertension. Psychosom Med 1982; 44: 195–201
  • Denollet J, Sys S U, Stroobant N, Rombouts H, Gillebert T C, Brutsaert D L. Personality as independent predictor of long-term mortality in patients with coronary heart disease. Lancet 1996; 347: 417–21
  • Jern S. Psychological and hemodynamic factors in borderline hypertension. Ada Med Scand Suppl 1982; 662: 1–55
  • Rosenman R H, Brand R J, Jenkins C D, Friedman M, Straus R, Wurm M. Coronary heart disease in the Western Collaborative Group Study. Final follow-up experience of 8 112 years. JAMA 1975; 233: 872–7
  • Friedman M, Thoresen C E, Gill J J, Ulmer D, Powell L H, Price V A, et al. Alteration of type A behavior and its effect on cardiac recurrences in post myocardial infarction patients: summary results of the recurrent coronary prevention project. Am Heart J 1986; 112: 653–65
  • Barefoot J C, Dahlstrom W G, Williams R B, Jr. Hostility, CHD incidence, and total mortality: a 25-year follow-up study of 255 physicians. Psychosom Med 1983; 45: 59–63
  • Maahews K A, Owens J F, Kuller L H, Sutton-Tyrrell K, Jansen-McWilliams L. Are hostility and anxiety associated with carotid atherosclerosis in healthy postmenopausal women?. Psychosom Med 1998; 60: 633–8
  • Kaplan J R, Adam M R, Anthony M S, Morgan T M, Manuck S B, Clarkson T B. Dominant social status and contraceptive hormone treatment inhibit atherogenesis in premenopausal monkeys. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 1995; 15: 2094–100
  • Clarkson T B, Kaplan J R, Adam M R, Manuck S B. Psycho-social influences on the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis among nonhuman primates. Circulation 1987; 76(Suppl I)1-29–1-40
  • Falkner B, Onesto G, Angelakos E T, Fernandes M, Langman C. Cardiovascular response to mental stress in normal adolescents with hypertensive parents: Hemodynamics and mental stress in adolescents. Hypertension 1979; 1: 23–30
  • Ditto B, Miller S B. Forearm blood flow responses of offspring of hypertensives to an extended stress task. Hypertension 1989; 13: 181–7
  • Light K C, Koepke J P, Obrist P A, Willis P W. Psychological stress induces sodium and fluid retention in men at high risk for hypertension. Science 1983; 220: 429–31
  • Manuck S B. Cardiovascular reactivity in cardiovascular disease: ‘Once more unto the breach’. Int J Behav Med 1994; 1: 4–31
  • Keys A, Taylor H L, Blackburn H L, Brozek H, Anderson J T, Simonson E. Mortality and coronary heart disease among men studied for 23 years. Arch Intern Med 1971; 128: 210–4
  • Lundin S, Thorén P. Renal function and sympathetic activity in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) during mental stress. Acta physiol Scand 1982; 115: 115–24
  • McCarty R. Stress, behavior and experimental hypertension. Neurosci Biobehav Rev 1983; 7: 493–502
  • Knardahl S. Behavioral responsiveness and habituation to discrete auditory and olfactory stimuli in spontaneously hypertensive, two-kidney one-clip clip hypertensive, and normotensive rats. Behav Neural Biol 1982; 36: 266–79
  • Knardahl S, Hendley E D. Association between cardiovascular reactivity to stress and hypertension or behavior. Am J Physiol 1990; 259: H248–57
  • Steptoe A, Fieldman G, Evans O, Perry L. Control over work pace, job strain and cardiovascular responses in middle-aged men. J Hypertens 1993; 11: 751–9
  • Knardahl S, Sanders B J, Johnson A K. Haemodynamic responses to conflict stress in borderline hypertensive rats. J Hypertens 1989; 7: 585–93
  • Henry J P, Grim C E. Psychosocial mechanisms of primary hypertension. J Hypertens 1990; 8(9)783–93
  • Ely D L, Henry J P. Neuroendocrine response patterns in dominant and subordinate mice. Horm Behav 1978; 10: 156–69
  • Kaplan J R, Manuck S B, Clarkson T B, Lusso F M, Taub D M, Miller E W. Social stress and atherosclerosis in normocholesterolemic monkeys. Science 1983; 220: 733–5
  • Virgin C E, Jr, Sapolsky R M. Styles of male social behavior and their endocrine correlates. Am J Primatol 1997; 42: 25–39
  • Weiss J M. Effects of coping behavior with and without a feedback signal on stress pathology in rats. J Comp Physiol Psychol 1971; 77: 22–30
  • Ursin H, Baade E, Levine S, et al. Psychobiology of stress. Academic Press, New York 1978
  • Bandler R, Shipley M T. Columnar organization in the midbrain periaqueductal gray: modules for emotional expression?. Trends Neurosc 1994; 17: 379–89
  • Darwin C. The expression of emotions in man and animals. Appleton, New York, NY 1872
  • Cacioppo J T, Petty R E, Losch M E, Kim H S. Electromyographic activity over facial muscle regions can differentiate the valence and intensity of affective reactions. J Pers Soc Psychol 1986; 50: 260–8
  • Dimberg U. Facial reactions to facial expressions. Psychophysiology 1982; 19: 643–7
  • Leshner A I, Politch J A. Hormonal control of submissiveness in mice: irrelevance of the androgens and relevance of the pituitary-adrenal hormones. Physiol Behav 1979; 22: 531–4
  • Suarez E C, Harlan E, Peoples M C, Williams R B, Jr. Cardiovascular and emotional responses in women: the role of hostility and harassment. Health Psychol 1993; 12: 459–68
  • Powch I G, Houston B K. Hostility, anger-in, and cardiovascular reactivity in white women. Health Psychol 1996; 15: 200–8
  • Guyll M, Contrada R J. Trait hostility and ambulatory cardiovascular activity: responses to social interaction. Health Psychol 1998; 17: 30–9

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.