Status, Stress, and Atherosclerosis: The Role of Environment and Individual Behavior
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 896 (1) , 145-161
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.1999.tb08112.x
Abstract
Atherosclerosis induced by moderate hyperlipoproteinemia in group‐housed cynomolgus monkeys differs significantly between animals of dominant and subordinate social status. The nature of this association also varies by sex, and in males, by stability of the social environment. Dominant males develop more extensive atherosclerosis than subordinates when housed in unstable, but not stable, social groups; in contrast, subordinate females develop greater atherosclerosis than dominants, and do so irrespective of the conditions of social housing. Experimental investigations reveal that the first of these associations (males) is mediated by concomitant sympathoadrenal activation and the second (females) by ovarian impairment associated with the stress of social subordination. We believe our findings offer clues to the neuroendocrine mediation of behavioral influences on coronary artery disease in humans. This is particularly true where these influences reflect asymmetries in the power or status relationships among individuals within similar social environments, or when dimensions of temperament or disposition give rise to such relationships. We propose that these data also may be informative regarding the pathophysiological sequelae of social stratification (in which disease incidence varies by class membership within populations), but only where social environments engendered by class inequalities exacerbate status‐dependent behavioral differences among individuals within communities of associates.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Monkeys, aggression, and the pathobiology of atherosclerosisAggressive Behavior, 1998
- Psychosocial stress causes endothelial injury in cynomolgus monkeys via β1-adrenoceptor activationAtherosclerosis, 1998
- Coronary heart disease: OverviewThe Lancet, 1996
- Ovulatory premenopausal women lose cancellous spinal bone: A five year prospective studyBone, 1996
- Dominant Social Status and Contraceptive Hormone Treatment Inhibit Atherogenesis in Premenopausal MonkeysArteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology, 1995
- The effect of alprazolam on serum cortisol and luteinizing hormone pulsatility in normal women and in women with stress-related anovulationJournal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1995
- Psychosocial influences on ovarian endocrine and ovulatory function in Macaca fascicularisPhysiology & Behavior, 1985
- Hemodynamic modification of aortic atherosclerosisAtherosclerosis, 1984
- Effects of gender and social behavior on the development of coronary artery atherosclerosis in cynomolgus macaquesAtherosclerosis, 1983
- Social Stress and Atherosclerosis in Normocholesterolemic MonkeysScience, 1983