Cardiovascular and neurohumoral responses to behavioral challenge as a function of race and sex. |
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Authors: | Tischenkel, Nancy J. Saab, Patrice G. Schneiderman, Neil Nelesen, Richard A. Pasin, Rosemary DeCarlo Goldstein, David A. Spitzer, Susan B. Woo-Ming, Rex Weidler, Donald J. |
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Abstract: | Cardiovascular and hormonal responses to a structured interview, an electronic video game, a cold pressor test, and exercise on a bicycle ergometer were assessed in 83 normotensive Black and White men and women (aged 25–44 yrs). Black Ss showed significantly greater diastolic blood pressure (DBP) responses than White Ss during the cold pressor test, which were not accounted for by an increase in plasma catecholamines. Exercise produced reliably greater systolic blood pressure (SBP) increases in Black women than in Black men or White women. Men showed significantly greater SBP and DBP changes than women during the video game. The pattern of physiological reactivity elicited by challenge may be related to the Ss' race and sex. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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