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Psychological stress and the longitudinal progression of subclinical atherosclerosis.

Chrystal Spencer, Rebecca G. Reed, Elizabeth Votruba‐Drzal, Peter J. Gianaros

2023Health Psychology10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In a midlife sample of adults, the present study tested the extent to which changes in psychological stress relate to the progression of subclinical cardiovascular disease over multiple years and explored the potential moderating role of cardiometabolic risk. METHOD: = 260), participants completed the 10-item Perceived Stress Scale, underwent assessments of their cardiometabolic risk, and underwent ultrasonography to measure carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT), which is a surrogate indicator of subclinical atherosclerosis. RESULTS: Regression models showed that the change in psychological stress from baseline to follow-up was positively associated with the corresponding change in IMT, with covariate control for age at baseline, sex at birth, and variability in length of follow-up across participants. Cardiometabolic risk factors did not statistically moderate this longitudinal association. In exploratory analyses, cardiometabolic risk factors also did not statistically mediate this association. CONCLUSION: These longitudinal findings suggest that increases in psychological stress in midlife relate to corresponding increases in subclinical atherosclerosis. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

Subclinical infectionMedicineInternal medicineLongitudinal studyIntima-media thicknessCardiorespiratory fitnessCarotid arteriesPathologyStress Responses and CortisolCardiovascular Health and Risk FactorsCardiac Health and Mental Health
Psychological stress and the longitudinal progression of subclinical atherosclerosis. | Litcius