Psychosocial Stress and Cardiovascular Disease: Pathophysiological Links
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Behavioral Medicine
- Vol. 27 (4) , 141-147
- https://doi.org/10.1080/08964280209596039
Abstract
The remarkable decline in cardiovascular disease (CVD) experienced in developed countries over the last 40 years appears to have abated. Currently, many CVD patients continue to show cardiac events despite optimal treatment of traditional risk factors. This evidence suggests that additional interventions, particularly those aimed at nontraditional factors, might be useful for continuing the decline. Psychosocial stress is a newly recognized (nontraditional) risk factor that appears to contribute to all recognized mechanisms underlying cardiac events, specifically, (a) clustering of traditional cardiovascular risk factors, (b) endothelial dysfunction, (c) myocardial ischemia, (d) plaque rupture, (e) thrombosis, and (f) malignant arrhythmias. A better understanding of the behavioral and physiologic associations between psychosocial stress and CVD will assist researchers in identifying effective approaches for reducing or reversing the damaging effects of stress and may lead to further reductions of CVD morbidity and mortality.Keywords
This publication has 66 references indexed in Scilit:
- Heart Rate Variability Reproducibility and Stability Using Commercially Available Equipment in Coronary Artery Disease With Daily Life Myocardial Ischemia**This work was supported in part by grants from the Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Grant HL47337 from the National Institutes of Health, and Marquette Electronics Inc.The American Journal of Cardiology, 1996
- Atherosclerosis: Risk factors and the vascular endotheliumAmerican Heart Journal, 1996
- Mental stress as an acute trigger of ischemic left ventricular dysfunction and blood pressure elevation in coronary artery diseaseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1990
- Changes in Risk Factors and the Decline in Mortality from Cardiovascular DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- Mental Stress and the Induction of Silent Myocardial Ischemia in Patients with Coronary Artery DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- Circadian Variation in the Frequency of Onset of Acute Myocardial InfarctionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Platelet activation and secretion associated with emotional stress.Circulation, 1985
- Psychosocial Influences on Mortality after Myocardial InfarctionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- The obligatory role of endothelial cells in the relaxation of arterial smooth muscle by acetylcholineNature, 1980
- Coronary Vasospasm as a Possible Cause of Myocardial InfarctionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1978