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Scientific Contributions

Trajectory of Psychological Risk and Incident Hypertension in Middle-Aged Women

Katri Räikkönen, Karen A. Matthews, Lewis H. Kuller
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Hypertension. 2001;38:798-802
Originally published October 1, 2001
Katri Räikkönen
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Karen A. Matthews
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Lewis H. Kuller
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Abstract

The aim of the study was to test the hypotheses that the trajectory of psychological risk (ie, persistent or increasing measures of depression and anxiety symptoms, anger, and low social support over time) increases the risk for the development of hypertension and that blood pressure levels fluctuate with psychological changes in women. Initially, healthy normotensive middle-aged women (n=541; 90.6% white, 8.9% African American) were followed across an average of 9.2 years of follow-up. Psychological characteristics were assessed repeatedly via standardized questionnaires, and Cox proportional hazards and random regression models were used to analyze their impact, adjusting for hypertension risk factors (age, race, years of education, parental history of hypertension, baseline blood pressure, body mass index, physical activity, alcohol use, and cigarette smoking). Seventy-five women became hypertensive during the follow-up period. Baseline levels of depression, anxiety, anger, and social support did not predict subsequent hypertension. A high level of anxiety throughout the follow-up, an increase in the level of feelings of anger, and a decrease in the level of social support over the follow-up were significant predictors of hypertension incidence (all P<0.05), although covariate adjustment reduced some of the significance levels to nonsignificance. In women, increases in depressive symptoms were significantly associated (P=0.003) with concurrent increases in the level of systolic blood pressure, especially among hypertensive patients (P=0.0001). Increasing levels of anger, decreasing levels of social support, and high anxiety increase the likelihood of women’s development of hypertension in midlife. These results emphasize the importance of evaluating the trajectory of psychological risk during the period of evolving hypertension.

  • blood pressure
  • risk factors
  • stress, mental
  • age
  • women
  • depression
  • anxiety
  • hostility
  • Received November 30, 2000.
  • Revision received January 12, 2001.
  • Accepted March 16, 2001.
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October 2001, Volume 38, Issue 4
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    Trajectory of Psychological Risk and Incident Hypertension in Middle-Aged Women
    Katri Räikkönen, Karen A. Matthews and Lewis H. Kuller
    Hypertension. 2001;38:798-802, originally published October 1, 2001

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    Trajectory of Psychological Risk and Incident Hypertension in Middle-Aged Women
    Katri Räikkönen, Karen A. Matthews and Lewis H. Kuller
    Hypertension. 2001;38:798-802, originally published October 1, 2001
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