Hypertension, Vol 16, 627-634, Copyright © 1990 by American Heart Association
C Perini, FB Muller, U Rauchfleisch, R Battegay, V Hobi and FR Buhler
Psychosomatic factors, sympathoneural and sympathoadrenal as well as
cardiovascular mechanisms, were studied in 24 patients 18-24 years of age
with borderline hypertension, 50 age-matched normotensive offspring of
hypertensive parents, and 49 controls with no family history of
hypertension. They were compared by projective and questionnaire-based
psychological tests and their circulatory and neurohormonal reactivity to
mental (Stroop color-word conflict test and arithmetic test) and physical
stressors (orthostasis and bicycle ergometry test) were measured.
Borderline hypertensive subjects externalized aggression less (p less than
0.05) but internalized it more (p less than 0.05) and were more submissive
(p less than 0.05) when compared with controls. Offspring of hypertensive
parents showed a similar but weaker pattern. Both risk groups reported more
positive interactions with their parents (genetic risk subjects versus
controls, p less than 0.05; borderline hypertensive patients versus
controls, p = 0.08) and had higher state- anxiety levels (p less than
0.05). There were more subjective symptoms of beta-adrenergic
receptor-mediated functions (e.g., tachycardia, tremor) in borderline
hypertensive subjects and offspring of hypertensive parents, elevated heart
rates (analysis of repeated measures, p less than 0.001), and enhanced
plasma norepinephrine concentrations (p less than 0.05) when compared with
controls. These findings in subjects at risk for the development of
hypertension suggest that psychosomatic factors and sympathetic
overactivity are involved in the early phase of hypertension.
ARTICLES
Psychosomatic factors in borderline hypertensive subjects and offspring of hypertensive parents
Department of Medicine, University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland.
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