Do behavioral responses mediate or moderate the relation between cardiovascular reactivity to stress and parental history of hypertension?

Nicole L. Frazer, Kevin T. Larkin*, Jeffrey L. Goodie

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

To examine whether differences in behavioral responses to stress mediated or moderated the relation between cardiovascular response to stress and parental history of hypertension, 64 healthy undergraduates - 16 men with hypertensive parents (PH+), 16 men without hypertensive parents (PH-), 16 PH+ women, and 16 PH- women - participated in a mental arithmetic task, mirror tracing task, and 2 interpersonal role plays. PH+ participants exhibited higher resting heart rates than PH- participants and higher resting systolic blood pressures (SBPs) than PH- women. PH+ participants exhibited greater SBP responses to tasks and engaged in more negative verbal and nonverbal behavior across tasks than PH- counterparts. Differences in behavioral responding neither mediated nor moderated the observed relation between parental history status and SBP response to stress.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)244-253
Number of pages10
JournalHealth Psychology
Volume21
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 2002
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Anger
  • Behavioral responses to stress
  • Blood pressure
  • Cardiovascular reactivity
  • Family history of hypertension
  • Heart rate
  • Interpersonal stress

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