Type D personality and hemodynamic reactivity to laboratory stress in women
Citation
Howard, S., Huges, B.M. and James, J.E. (2011) ‘Type D personality and hemodynamic reactivity to laboratory stress in women’. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 80, 96-102
Date
2011Author
Howard, Siobhan
James, Jack E.
Hughes, Brian M.
Peer Reviewed
YesMetadata
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Howard, S., Huges, B.M. and James, J.E. (2011) ‘Type D personality and hemodynamic reactivity to laboratory stress in women’. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 80, 96-102
Abstract
Abstract
The Type D personality (identified by high levels of both negative affectivity and social
inhibition) has been associated with negative health consequences in cardiac patients.
However, few studies have explored whether the Type D personality is associated with
particular patterns of cardiovascular responses to stress. In the present study, cardiovascular
reactivity to psychological stress (CVR) was examined as a possible mediating mechanism by
which Type D personality may affect cardiovascular health, with specific focus on
hemodynamic profile. Eighty-nine female university students completed a mental arithmetic
stressor while undergoing hemodynamic monitoring. Blood pressure, heart rate, cardiac
output, and total peripheral resistance in response to the stressor were examined. Type D
personality was assessed using the 16-item Type D scale. Results indicated that there were no
between-group differences in magnitude of blood pressure increase, with both Type D and
non-Type D individuals demonstrating myocardial response profiles. However, Type D
individuals were less “myocardial” than non-Type D individuals. This indicates that a weak
myocardial response to an active stressor in Type D individuals may be indicative of
hemodynamic maladaptation to stress, implicating CVR as a possible mechanism involved in
Type D-cardiovascular health associations.
Keywords
Type D personalityCardiovascular reactivity
Hemodynamic profile
Myocardial response