학술논문

Hemodynamic profile and compensation deficit in African and European Americans during physical and mental stress
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Cardiovascular
Mental Health
Hypertension
Clinical Research
Behavioral and Social Science
Good Health and Well Being
Adaptation
Physiological
Black or African American
Anger
Blood Pressure
Cardiac Output
Female
Hemodynamics
Humans
Male
Mental Recall
Stress
Psychological
Task Performance and Analysis
United States
Vascular Resistance
White People
Young Adult
Compensation deficit
Ethnic differences
Hemodynamic profile
Stress
Neurosciences
Psychology
Cognitive Sciences
Experimental Psychology
Language
Abstract
Increased vascular reactivity to stress has been suggested to contribute to the greater risk for developing hypertension in African Americans. Here, we examined the way (hemodynamic profile) and the extent to which (compensation deficit) cardiac output and total peripheral resistance compensate for each other in determining blood pressure responses to a physical (orthostasis) and a mental (anger recall) stress task, in normotensive African American (AA, n = 30) and European American (EA, n = 48) college students. Blood pressure stress reactivity did not differ as a function of race. However, AAs showed a prominent vascular hemodynamic profile and a significant compensation deficit in response to both tasks, while EAs showed no hemodynamic response to orthostasis and a mixed profile in response to anger recall. The present findings demonstrate a more prominent vascular hemodynamic reactivity to stress in AAs, which could contribute to the pathogenesis of hypertension in this ethnic group.