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'Polycythaemia of stress' in subjects with Type A and Type B behaviour patterns.

Authors :
Jern S
Jern C
Wadenvik H
Source :
Journal of psychosomatic research [J Psychosom Res] 1991; Vol. 35 (1), pp. 91-8.
Publication Year :
1991

Abstract

To determine the importance of emotional stress for relative polycythaemia, we studied 11 subjects with the Type A and 11 subjects with the Type B behaviour patterns during short-term mental stress. All subjects were healthy, normotensive non-smoking young males aged 20-34 yr. without any medication. During rest there were no significant differences in heart rate, blood pressure, or plasma catecholamines between the two groups, but the A-group had significantly higher haemoglobin concentration (147 vs 140 g/l; p less than 0.005) and haematocrit (43.8 vs 42.1%: p = 0.05) than the B-group. In the whole group, there was a positive correlation between resting diastolic blood pressure and haemoglobin concentration (r = 0.53; p less than 0.05). In response to 10 min of mental arithmetic, haematocrit, haemoglobin and erythrocyte count rose approximately 2% (p less than 0.001 throughout). The stress-induced changes were not significantly different between the A- and B-groups. It is concluded that mild relative polycythaemia could be induced by acute emotional stress. In subjects with the Type A behaviour pattern a slight haemoconcentration is present already at rest, which further increases during stress.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022-3999
Volume :
35
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of psychosomatic research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
2023145
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-3999(91)90010-l