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Psychosomatic Medicine 65:46-62 (2003)
© 2003 American Psychosomatic Society


REACTIVITY SPECIAL SECTION

Cardiovascular Reactivity and Development of Preclinical and Clinical Disease States

Frank A. Treiber, PhD, Thomas Kamarck, PhD, Neil Schneiderman, PhD, David Sheffield, PhD, Gaston Kapuku, MD, PhD and Teletia Taylor, PhD

From the Departments of Pediatrics and Psychiatry, Georgia Prevention Institute, Medical College of Georgia (F.A.T., G.K.), Augusta, Georgia; Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh (T.K., T.T.), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Department of Psychology, University of Miami (N.S.), Miami, Florida; and Research Services, Veterans Administration Medical Center (D.S.), Gainesville, Florida.

Address reprint requests to: Frank Treiber, Medical College of Georgia, Georgia Prevention Institute, Bldg. HS1640, Augusta, GA 30912. Email: ftreiber{at}mail.mcg.edu

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this review is to evaluate the evidence for the hypothesis that cardiovascular reactivity can predict the development of preclinical (elevated blood pressure, ventricular remodeling, carotid atherosclerosis) and/or clinical cardiovascular disease states.

METHODS: A review of the literature was conducted examining prospective studies.

RESULTS: Three large epidemiological studies with long-term follow-up periods (20 years or more) have found blood pressure responses to the cold pressor task to be predictive of subsequent essential hypertension in initially normotensive samples. Studies showing less consistent results have tended to use shorter-term follow-up periods. A larger body of literature demonstrates consistent associations between stress-related cardiovascular reactivity and blood pressure elevations in youth over the course of 1 to 6 years; such relationships have not been consistently shown among adult samples. Moderately consistent evidence points to a positive relationship between reactivity and other measures of subclinical disease (increased left ventricular mass and carotid atherosclerosis) among the few prospective studies that have examined these issues to date. A number of additional factors, however, such as baseline levels of disease risk and exposure to psychosocial stress, seem to moderate these relationships. Health status at baseline also seems to moderate the association between reactivity and clinical coronary heart disease in recent reports: two of three existing studies in initially healthy samples show no evidence of a relationship between reactivity and clinical outcomes, whereas three of four studies in samples with preexisting coronary heart disease or essential hypertension show a positive relationship between reactivity and subsequent disease states.

CONCLUSIONS: There is reasonable evidence to suggest that cardiovascular reactivity can predict the development of some preclinical states (eg, increased left ventricular mass and blood pressure) states and perhaps even new clinical events in some patients with essential hypertension or coronary heart disease. However, much more information is needed concerning moderating and potentially confounding variables before the robustness of the positive relationships can become clinically useful.

Key Words: cardiovascular reactivity • prediction • essential hypertension • cardiovascular disease • preclinical disease • left ventricular mass.

Abbreviations: BMI = body mass index; BP = blood pressure; CHD = coronary heart disease; CPT = cold pressor task; CV = cardiovascular; CVD = cardiovascular disease; CVR = cardiovascular reactivity; DBP = diastolic blood pressure; EH = essential hypertension; HR = heart rate; LVM = left ventricular mass; MI = myocardial infarction; SBP = systolic blood pressure.




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