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Psychosomatic Medicine, Vol 44, Issue 5 431-436, Copyright © 1982 by American Psychosomatic Society


ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Type A behavior and the thallium stress test

JP Kahn, DS Kornfeld, DK Blood, RB Lynn, SS Heller and KA Frank

Several recent studies have examined the association between Type A personality and coronary artery disease (CAD) by coronary angiography. Most of these studies have reported a significant association. The present study is an attempt at further confirmation, using a new non-invasive technique for measuring CAD. Subjects were 53 patients undergoing routine exercise stress tests with concomitant thallium-201 myocardial perfusion studies. Five aspects of Type A behavior were assessed by the use of the Rosenman-Friedman Semistructured Interview, and each was rated on a three-point scale. Severity of CAD was independently estimated on a four-point scale. Pearson correlation coefficients were separately computed for patients with and without reported history of myocardial infarction (MI). For 37 patients without reported MI, CAD severity was significantly correlated with Overall Type A (r = -0.53), Vocal Characteristics (r = -0.53), Job Involvement (r = -0.36) and Aggressiveness (r = -0.48), but not Time Urgency (r = -0.25). For 16 patients with reported MI, CAD severity was significantly correlated with Job Involvement only (r = +0.49). The data are consistent with the association of Type A personality and coronary atherogenesis, but may also reflect Type A psychological and physiological characteristics. Future studies may be able to examine these and other aspects of Type A behavior using this noninvasive technique in more diverse patient populations.


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M. W. Ketterer, L. Kenyon, B. A. Foley, J. Brymer, K. Rhoads, P. Kraft, and W. R. Lovallo
Denial of Depression as an Independent Correlate of Coronary Artery Disease
J Health Psychol, January 1, 1996; 1(1): 93 - 105.
[Abstract]




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Copyright © 1982 by the American Psychosomatic Society