scholarly journals Stress and the Cardiovascular System

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Josephine M Lake

<p>The research reported in this thesis is primarily concerned with systemic arterial pulse transit time (PTT) which is of physiological significance because it is the most appropriate indicator of arterial compliance, the primary determinant of cardiac load, PTT acceleration or deceleration being associated with an increase or decrease in cardiac load respectively. Initially, PTT was investigated in the context of active/passive coping. Obrist, et al., (1978) proposed that active coping is generated by tasks of moderate difficulty and is characterized by large, sustained cardiac accelerations. Interbeat interval (IBI) was measured as the reference response for active/passive coping. The assumption is that active coping is the behavioural state which provides the link between psychological stress and hypertension. However, contemporary cardiovascular physiologists put more emphasis on arterial compliance than IBI because it is not only significant in essential hypertension, but is also a critical determinant of circulation efficiency in health and disease. In Experiment 1 men and women completed mental arithmetic, problem solving, reaction time and personal tempo (voluntary button pressing). Acceleratory and deceleratory PTT changes were found during all tasks; IBI changes were predominantly acceleratory and their magnitude was determined by task difficulty. In Experiment 2 subjects completed problem solving tasks at two levels of difficulty. The results confirmed that unexplained directional variability characterized PTT changes and acceleration characterized IBI changes. It was hypothesized that subject state could be a determinant of PTT response direction. In Experiment 3 the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the Stress Arousal Checklist, the Eysenck Personality Inventory and the Jenkins Activity Survey were administered before problem solving at three levels of difficulty and personal tempo were completed. PTT directional variability was not accounted for by any of the measures used. IBI changes were again acceleratory and their magnitude was determined by task difficulty. Two extensions of the active/passive coping hypothesis were proposed: 1) that task difficulty and magnitude of IBI change are related along a continuum of behavioural coping; 2) that task type, not difficulty, determines the frequency of IBI acceleration. The effect of task contingency on IBI change was identified as requiring more detailed investigation. It was further hypothesized that relative subject state as measured by a change in resting IBI (Malmo, 1959) could predict the direction of PTT change during task. In Experiment 4 subjects completed all tasks from Experiment 3 in both parts of an extended experimental session. Half the subjects ingested caffeine. IBI decelerated during baseline from part 1 to part 2 and deceleratory PTT changes dominated task responding in part 2. However, a caffeine-induced deceleration in IBI across baselines was not associated with deceleratory PTT change, and directional variability continued to characterize PTT changes. In order to eliminate the directional variability of PTT changes during tasks a further experiment was undertaken which manipulated relative behavioural state prior to task by informing subjects on their first attendance at the laboratory that they would be required to perform a demanding problem solving task on their fifth attendance. From sessions 1 to 4 subjects attended the laboratory for short rest periods only during which cardiovascular activity was recorded. On the fifth session subjects also completed a task. In that experiment (Experiment 5), IBI acceleration over multiple session baselines in anticipation of a task was associated with uniformly acceleratory PTT changes during tasks, supporting the hypothesis that subject initial state is an important determinant of the direction of PTT change, and hence in whether cardiac load increases or decreases under stress.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Josephine M Lake

<p>The research reported in this thesis is primarily concerned with systemic arterial pulse transit time (PTT) which is of physiological significance because it is the most appropriate indicator of arterial compliance, the primary determinant of cardiac load, PTT acceleration or deceleration being associated with an increase or decrease in cardiac load respectively. Initially, PTT was investigated in the context of active/passive coping. Obrist, et al., (1978) proposed that active coping is generated by tasks of moderate difficulty and is characterized by large, sustained cardiac accelerations. Interbeat interval (IBI) was measured as the reference response for active/passive coping. The assumption is that active coping is the behavioural state which provides the link between psychological stress and hypertension. However, contemporary cardiovascular physiologists put more emphasis on arterial compliance than IBI because it is not only significant in essential hypertension, but is also a critical determinant of circulation efficiency in health and disease. In Experiment 1 men and women completed mental arithmetic, problem solving, reaction time and personal tempo (voluntary button pressing). Acceleratory and deceleratory PTT changes were found during all tasks; IBI changes were predominantly acceleratory and their magnitude was determined by task difficulty. In Experiment 2 subjects completed problem solving tasks at two levels of difficulty. The results confirmed that unexplained directional variability characterized PTT changes and acceleration characterized IBI changes. It was hypothesized that subject state could be a determinant of PTT response direction. In Experiment 3 the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the Stress Arousal Checklist, the Eysenck Personality Inventory and the Jenkins Activity Survey were administered before problem solving at three levels of difficulty and personal tempo were completed. PTT directional variability was not accounted for by any of the measures used. IBI changes were again acceleratory and their magnitude was determined by task difficulty. Two extensions of the active/passive coping hypothesis were proposed: 1) that task difficulty and magnitude of IBI change are related along a continuum of behavioural coping; 2) that task type, not difficulty, determines the frequency of IBI acceleration. The effect of task contingency on IBI change was identified as requiring more detailed investigation. It was further hypothesized that relative subject state as measured by a change in resting IBI (Malmo, 1959) could predict the direction of PTT change during task. In Experiment 4 subjects completed all tasks from Experiment 3 in both parts of an extended experimental session. Half the subjects ingested caffeine. IBI decelerated during baseline from part 1 to part 2 and deceleratory PTT changes dominated task responding in part 2. However, a caffeine-induced deceleration in IBI across baselines was not associated with deceleratory PTT change, and directional variability continued to characterize PTT changes. In order to eliminate the directional variability of PTT changes during tasks a further experiment was undertaken which manipulated relative behavioural state prior to task by informing subjects on their first attendance at the laboratory that they would be required to perform a demanding problem solving task on their fifth attendance. From sessions 1 to 4 subjects attended the laboratory for short rest periods only during which cardiovascular activity was recorded. On the fifth session subjects also completed a task. In that experiment (Experiment 5), IBI acceleration over multiple session baselines in anticipation of a task was associated with uniformly acceleratory PTT changes during tasks, supporting the hypothesis that subject initial state is an important determinant of the direction of PTT change, and hence in whether cardiac load increases or decreases under stress.</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kornanong Yuenyongchaiwat ◽  
Ian Baker ◽  
Frankie Maratos ◽  
David Sheffield

AbstractThe study examined whether cardiovascular responses to active or passive coping tasks and single or multiple tasks predicted changes in resting blood pressure (BP) over a ten-month period. Heart rate (HR), BP, cardiac output (CO), and total peripheral resistance (TPR) were measured at rest, and during mental stress tests (mental arithmetic, speech, and cold pressor tasks). A total of 104 eligible participants participated in the initial study, and 77 (74.04%) normotensive adult participants’ resting BP were re-evaluated at ten-month follow-up. Regression analyses indicated that after adjustment for baseline BP, initial age, gender, body mass index, family history of cardiovascular disease, and current cigarette smoking, heighted systolic blood pressure (SBP) and HR responses to an active coping task (mental arithmetic) were associated with increased future SBP (ΔR2 = .060, ΔR2 = .045, respectively). Further, aggregated SBP responsivity (over the three tasks) to the predictor models resulted in significant, but smaller increases in ΔR2 accounting for .040 of the variance of follow-up SBP. These findings suggest that cardiovascular responses to active coping tasks predict future SBP. Further, compared with single tasks, the findings revealed that SBP responses to three tasks were less predictive compared to an individual task (i.e., mental arithmetic). Of importance, hemodynamic reactivity (namely CO and TPR) did not predict future BP suggesting that more general psychophysiological processes (e.g., inflammation, platelet aggregation) may be implicated, or that BP, but not hemodynamic reactivity may be a marker of hypertension.


2014 ◽  
Vol 106 (3) ◽  
pp. 608-626 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Goldhammer ◽  
Johannes Naumann ◽  
Annette Stelter ◽  
Krisztina Tóth ◽  
Heiko Rölke ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 177
Author(s):  
Muhammad Kris Yuan Hidayatulloh ◽  
Supari Muslim ◽  
Erina Rahmadyanti ◽  
Euis Ismayati ◽  
Nita Kusumawati

This study aims to: (1) analyze the level of creative thinking possessed by each class XI students of Building Drawing Technique (BDT); and (2) analyze the influence of the level of thinking on the learning outcomes of the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains. This type of research is correlational research through a quantitative approach method. The population in this study were all students in building expertise competencies at SMK Negeri 1 Nganjuk which included Geomatics and BDT. The sample used in this study was XI BDT class students. The instrument used in analyzing the level of creative thinking (LCT) is a problem-solving test sheet of the type of multiple solution tasks. The data analysis technique uses a linear regression test. The results of the study concluded that: (1) there were as many as 4 students included in the category of LCT 4 (very creative), there were 12 students included in the category of LCT 3 (creative), there are 11 students included in the category 2 LCT (quite creative), there are no students included in the category of LCT 1 (less creative), and there are as many as 11 students who included in the category of LCT 0 (not creative); (2) there is a significant influence between the level of creative thinking on the cognitive and psychomotor learning outcomes; and (3) there is a very significant influence between the level of creative thinking on the affective learning outcomes of class XI BDT students.


2020 ◽  
Vol 73 (7) ◽  
pp. 1115-1132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Glaser ◽  
André Knops

Recent research suggests that addition and subtraction induce horizontal shifts of attention. Previous studies used single-digit (1d) problems or verification paradigms that lend themselves to alternative solution strategies beyond mental arithmetic. To measure spatial attention during the active production of solutions to complex two-digit arithmetic problems (2d) without manual motor involvement, we used a temporal order judgement (TOJ) paradigm in which two lateralised targets were sequentially presented on screen with a varying stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA). Participants verbally indicated which target appeared first. By varying the delay between the arithmetic problem presentation and the TOJ task, we investigated how arithmetically induced attention shifts develop over time (Experiment 1, n = 31 and Experiment 2, n = 58). In Experiment 2, we additionally varied the carry property of the arithmetic task to examine how task difficulty modulates the effects. In the arithmetic task, participants were first presented with the arithmetic problem via headphones and performed the TOJ task after the delay before responding to the arithmetic task. To account for spontaneous attentional biases, a baseline TOJ was run without arithmetic processing. Both experiments revealed that addition induces shifts of spatial attention to the right suggesting that visuospatial attention mechanisms are recruited during complex arithmetic. We observed no difference in spatial attention between the carry and noncarry condition (Experiment 2). No shifts were observed for subtraction problems. No common and conclusive influence of delay was observed across experiments. Qualitative differences between addition and subtraction and the role of task difficulty are discussed.


2007 ◽  
Vol 101 (3) ◽  
pp. 823-830 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Houtz ◽  
Haifa Matos ◽  
Min-Kyung S. Park ◽  
Jennifer Scheinholtz ◽  
Edwin Selby

52 Master's-level female graduate students completed VIEW: An Assessment of Problem Solving Style and provided attributions for their successes and failures according to several categories of reasons. Attributions were in the form of percentages to the categories of skill or ability, effort devoted to the task, task difficulty, chance, or other factors, after Weiner's theory of motivation. Women scoring as more Developer than Explorer on VIEW attributed a greater percentage of their failures to uncontrollable factors (chance and task difficulty). These results are consistent with the theory that individuals with a Developer style are more organized, deliberate, “planful,” and precise in their work efforts. Thus, such individuals would more likely attribute failure to factors they had not foreseen.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 53-56
Author(s):  
Dmitry A. Zhukov ◽  
Vsevolod V. Nemez ◽  
Ekaterina P. Vinogradova

Objective. The effect of antidepressant bupropion on the behavior of rats subjected to chronic mild unpredictable stress was investigated. Rats with opposite coping styles — active and passive — were subjected to stress. Materials and methods. In the population of outbred animals Wistar were isolated individuals with the opposite coping styles on the basis of the acquisition of active avoidance. The animals of these two groups were tested in the Porsolt’s test and in the elevated plus-maze, and then subjected to chronic stress. Results. Behavioral deficits were more pronounced in rats with initial active coping style. After administration of bupropion behavior in the Porsolt’s test was restored only in rats with initially active coping style. On the behavior of animals with an initially passive coping style, bupropion had no impact. Conclusion. Our findings suggest the different nature of post-stress disorders in animals with different active and passive coping styles.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. e0257966
Author(s):  
Tino Prell ◽  
Jenny Doris Liebermann ◽  
Sarah Mendorf ◽  
Thomas Lehmann ◽  
Hannah M. Zipprich

Objective To develop multidimensional approaches for pain management, this study aimed to understand how PD patients cope with pain. Design Cross-sectional, cohort study. Setting Monocentric, inpatient, university hospital. Participants 52 patients with Parkinson’s disease (without dementia) analysed. Primary and secondary outcome measures Motor function, nonmotor symptoms, health-related quality of life (QoL), and the Coping Strategies Questionnaire were assessed. Elastic net regularization and multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) were used to study the association among coping, clinical parameters, and QoL. Results Most patients cope with pain through active cognitive (coping self-statements) and active behavioral strategies (increasing pain behaviors and increasing activity level). Active coping was associated with lower pain rating. Regarding QoL domains, active coping was associated with better physical functioning and better energy, whereas passive coping was associated with poorer emotional well-being. However, as demonstrated by MANOVA, the impact of coping factors (active and passive) on the Short Form 36 domains was negligible after correction for age, motor function, and depression. Conclusion Passive coping strategies are the most likely coping response of those with depressive symptoms, whereas active coping strategies are the most likely coping response to influence physical function. Although coping is associated with pain rating, the extent that pain coping responses can impact on QoL seems to be low.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liudmila Baiushkina

Background:chronic migraine (СM) is a highly disabling neurological disease that is difficult to treat. The success of therapeutic management depends, in part, on psychosocial and personal factors. Aims:we have evaluated the clinical characteristics of patients suffering from СM, depending on the prevailing coping strategy of the individual. Methods:104 people with an established diagnosis of СM were examined, all of them underwent clinical and neurological examination and questionnaire testing. Results:in our group of patients, active behavioral coping strategies (a strategy for solving the problem and seeking social support) prevailed, passive coping was much less common. Patients with active coping strategies had the lowest level of comorbid psychoemotional disorders. Patients with passive coping strategies had a shorter history, the least severity of the effect of migraine, but were comparable in frequency of headaches and time lost due to headaches with patients with active coping strategies. Key words:chronic migraine, coping strategies, comorid disorders, anxiety, depression.


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