Thinking About a Close Relationship Differentially Impacts Cardiovascular Stress Responses Among Depressed and Nondepressed Women
Objective: Individuals with depression and low social support are at elevated risk for developing cardiovascular disease-presumptively through mechanisms involving dysregulated stress physiology. While depressed individuals often report diminished social support and elevated levels of social distres...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Health psychology 2011-05, Vol.30 (3), p.276-284 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Objective:
Individuals with depression and low social support are at elevated risk for developing cardiovascular disease-presumptively through mechanisms involving dysregulated stress physiology. While depressed individuals often report diminished social support and elevated levels of social distress, few studies have examined how social factors impact stress-related cardiovascular activity in depressed samples. Accordingly, we evaluated the social modulation of stress-related cardiovascular activity in a sample of 38 medically healthy, unmedicated depressed and nondepressed individuals.
Methods:
Cardiovascular and psychological measures were obtained before and after depressed and nondepressed women engaged in a speech stress task. To evaluate the impact of social factors on stress responses, half of the women completed the speech stress task first, while the other half completed the speech stress after engaging in a relationship-focused imagery task.
Results:
Nondepressed women who first thought about a close relationship displayed global attenuations in blood pressure throughout the subsequent stress task, consistent with a
stress-buffering effect
of perceived social support. Conversely, depressed women who first thought about a close relationship displayed global elevations in blood pressure throughout the subsequent stress task, consistent with a
stress-enhancing effect
of perceived social distress in depressed women.
Conclusion:
Thinking about a close relationship differentially impacted subsequent cardiovascular activity during an evocative stressor in depressed and nondepressed women. Understanding the social context in which stress is experienced may aid in identifying, and ultimately attenuating, cardiovascular risks observed among patients with major depressive disorder. |
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ISSN: | 0278-6133 1930-7810 |
DOI: | 10.1037/a0023005 |