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The effect of trait rumination on adaptation to repeated stress

Authors :
Jillian A. Johnson
Kim L. Lavoie
Linda E. Carlson
Simon L. Bacon
Tavis S. Campbell
Source :
Psychosomatic medicine. 74(3)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Exaggerated and prolonged cardiovascular responses to mental stress have been implicated in the etiology of hypertension. Rumination may play a role in the maintenance or reactivation of cardiovascular responses to mental stress and prevent cardiovascular adaptation or create sensitization on reexposure. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the influence of trait rumination on patterns of cardiovascular response adaptation after repeated exposure to a mental stressor.Cardiovascular data were collected from 82 undergraduate women during a baseline period and during a 5-minute emotional recall task on two separate occasions. Trait rumination was assessed using the Stress-Reactive Rumination Scale.A series of session (Sessions 1 and 2)-by-trait rumination general linear model repeated-measures analyses of covariance revealed several session-by-trait rumination interactions, such that participants who displayed higher levels of trait rumination showed less SBP (partial η(2) = 0.83, p = .01), diastolic blood pressure (partial η(2) = 0.84, p = .01), and heart rate (partial η(2) = 0.82, p = .02) adaptation to the laboratory mental stress task at the second exposure relative to those with lower levels of trait rumination.These findings suggest that trait rumination may contribute to sustained increases in blood pressure by influencing adaptation to mental stress.

Details

ISSN :
15347796
Volume :
74
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychosomatic medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....942d4f5bf4d288533286114909fd75db