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Published in: Annals of Behavioral Medicine 3/2008

01-12-2008 | Original Article

Can Psychological Factors Account for a Lack of Nocturnal Blood Pressure Dipping?

Authors: Wolfgang Linden, Ph.D., Kevin Klassen, B.A., Melanie Phillips, BSc.

Published in: Annals of Behavioral Medicine | Issue 3/2008

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Abstract

Background

In healthy individuals, blood pressure (BP) decreases, or “dips”, during sleep. Ethnicity and high daytime blood pressure level are known markers of nondipping status. The literature on psychological markers of nondipping is scant but suggests that anger/hostility and chronic stress may be contributors to nondipping.

Purpose

We have investigated this phenomenon in drug-free hypertensives who participated in a clinical trial and supplied extensive demographic, psychological, and biological risk factor data after medication washout prior to any treatment.

Method

Sixty-two patients were available for analysis (n = 30 nondippers). While most studies focus only on systolic BP nondipping, we explicitly studied both systolic and diastolic BP dipping as outcomes given that both have prognostic value.

Results

Hierarchical multiple regression revealed that predictor variables in total accounted for 38% of variance in systolic blood pressure dipping and 44% of variance in diastolic blood pressure dipping. A significant positive predictor was alcohol consumption (β = 0.37, t = 2.8, p = 0.007) for systolic BP and β = 0.43, t = 3.7, p = 0.001 for diastolic BP), and an anger diffusion preference was also a positive predictor (β = 0.42, t = 2.7, p = 0.01) for systolic BP dipping. No measure of trait negative affect reached significance as a predictor for systolic or diastolic BP dipping.

Conclusion

These findings suggest that for a better understanding of the nondipping phenomenon, behavioral risk factors are important, and anger response styles may also be worthy of further study. Furthermore, anger coping preferences may be as important, or even more so, than levels of negative affect.
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Metadata
Title
Can Psychological Factors Account for a Lack of Nocturnal Blood Pressure Dipping?
Authors
Wolfgang Linden, Ph.D.
Kevin Klassen, B.A.
Melanie Phillips, BSc.
Publication date
01-12-2008
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Annals of Behavioral Medicine / Issue 3/2008
Print ISSN: 0883-6612
Electronic ISSN: 1532-4796
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12160-008-9069-0

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