Hypertension, Vol 8, 1075-1083, Copyright © 1986 by American Heart Association
JK Murphy, BS Alpert, DM Moes and GW Somes
The magnitude of the cardiovascular response to stress has been implicated
in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease. Psychological stress
procedures have received increased usage as an alternative to expensive
physical (exercise) stress procedures. In the present investigation, 213
healthy, black or white, male or female children between the ages of 6 and
18 years were exposed to the psychological stress of a video game. The
video game challenge was administered by a black or a white experimenter
and was played under three levels of increasing stress, 1) personal
challenge, 2) experimenter's challenge, and 3) experimenter's challenge
accompanied by a financial incentive, while blood pressure and heart rate
were monitored. Results indicated that the video games provoked significant
and incremental cardiovascular reactivity across the games. Black children
demonstrated significantly greater reactivity than white children; the
racial difference was more reliably observed for systolic and diastolic
blood pressure than for heart rate. Furthermore, the race of the
experimenter exerted a significant effect and often interacted with the
race of the child, such that greater reactivity occurred in same-race
pairings than in mixed-race pairings. These results suggest that reactivity
is affected by an individual's race and social milieu and that reactivity
may be one mechanism responsible for the greater prevalence of hypertension
among blacks.
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Race and cardiovascular reactivity. A neglected relationship
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