A tale of two mechanisms: a meta-analysis of the autonomic basis of cardiovascular stress reactivity

Ryan Brindle, Anna Phillips, Annie Ginty

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

Abstract

To determine the contributions of the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems to cardiovascular stress reactivity, a meta-analysis was undertaken. The original literature search yielded 26,761 manuscripts; 203 were of sufficient quality and measured indices of sympathetic and/or parasympathetic activity resulting in an overall sample of 9,691 participants. A range of psychological stressors reliably perturbed cardiovascular function as indexed by blood pressure and heart rate (p’s < .001). Significant aggregate effects revealed a pattern of autonomic reactivity characterized by increased plasma epinephrine (69 studies, p < .001) and norepinephrine (72 studies, p < .001), decreased pre-ejection period (75 studies, p < .001) and vagal withdrawal (120 studies, p < .001). Subgroup analyses indicated variations in effect size according to stress task, gender, and age. Pharmacological manipulation of cardiovascular reactivity (29 studies) by alpha- and beta-adrenergic blockade showed that the former failed to influence reactivity (p = .474) while the latter significantly reduced heart rate and systolic blood pressure effect sizes (p < .001). Atropine failed to attenuate stress responses in one study. Overall, results indicated that cardiovascular reactivity to acute psychological stress is primarily driven by beta-adrenergic activation and vagal withdrawal.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication72nd Annual Scientific Meeting
Subtitle of host publication Stretching the Boundaries: From Mechanisms of Disease to Models of Health
PublisherAmerican Psychosomatic Society
Pages49
Number of pages1
Publication statusPublished - 13 Mar 2014
EventAmerican Psychosomatic Society - San Francisco, United States
Duration: 12 Mar 201415 Mar 2014

Conference

ConferenceAmerican Psychosomatic Society
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CitySan Francisco
Period12/03/1415/03/14

Bibliographical note

Abstracts from this meeting were also published in Psychosomatic Medicine, vol. 76(3), April 2014

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