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Published online before print July 16, 2007, 10.1097/PSY.0b013e3180cabc73
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Mental Stress Hemodynamic Responses and Myocardial Ischemia: Does Left Ventricular Dysfunction Alter These Relationships?

Sari D. Holmes, MS, David S. Krantz, PhD, Willem J. Kop, PhD, Albert Del Negro, MD, Pamela Karasik, MD and John S. Gottdiener, MD, FACC

From the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (S.D.H., D.S.K.), Bethesda, Maryland; University of Maryland Medical Center (W.J.K., J.S.G.), Baltimore, Maryland; Veterans Affairs Medical Center (P.K.), Washington, DC; and Arrhythmia Associates and INOVA Fairfax Hospital (A.D.N.), Fairfax, Virginia.


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Figure 1. Hemodynamic responses to rest, mental stress, and exercise across left ventricular function groups (mean ± SD); heart rate expressed as beats/min; systolic and diastolic blood pressures expressed as mm Hg)

 





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