Mental stress can trigger myocardial infarction, with poor vascular responses to stress implicated as a pathway. Vascular stress reactivity can be assessed by different methods, such as total peripheral resistance (TPR) and forearm blood flow (FBF). Little is known about how these vascular assessments are linked. This was examined in two separate studies. Healthy men (Study 1: N = 29, Study 2: N = 23) completed rest and mental arithmetic (Study 1: 8 min, Study 2: 16 min). In both studies, heart rate, mean arterial pressure, and FBF increased in response to stress. In Study 1, no changes in TPR were seen, but Study 2 found stress-induced increases in TPR. FBF was not linked to TPR at any time (all ps > .05). It appears that limb vasculature ...
Background: Stress is a risk factor for musculoskeletal pain. We wanted to explore stress related ph...
The purpose of this study was to determine neurovascular responses to mental stress (MS) in the supi...
Research indicates that individuals may experience a rise (positive responders) or fall (negative re...
The effects of mental stress (MS) on muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and limb blood flows h...
Objective: The hemodynamic basis of blood pressure responses during psychological stress shows strik...
There is evidence that mental stress can trigger myocardial infarction. Even though the underlying m...
Neurovascular responses to mental stress have been linked to several cardiovascular diseases, includ...
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the western world. As accumulating evidence ...
AIM: We studied the effects of mental stress on the tone of the radial artery, a medium-sized muscul...
BACKGROUND: The role of cardiovascular reactivity to study hypertension, and the assessment methods,...
AbstractObjectives. We sought to investigate the mechanism of a mental stress–induced fall in left v...
SUMMARY Mental stress, which increases blood pressure and heart rate, increases forearm blood flow b...
Abstract BACKGROUND: The role of cardiovascular reactivity to study hypertension, and the assessmen...
Mental stress elicits a robust and consistent forearm vasodilation, but vascular reactivity in the c...
CARDIOVASCULAR AND SYMPATHO-ADRENAL RESPONSES TO MENTAL STRESS, with special reference to the regula...
Background: Stress is a risk factor for musculoskeletal pain. We wanted to explore stress related ph...
The purpose of this study was to determine neurovascular responses to mental stress (MS) in the supi...
Research indicates that individuals may experience a rise (positive responders) or fall (negative re...
The effects of mental stress (MS) on muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and limb blood flows h...
Objective: The hemodynamic basis of blood pressure responses during psychological stress shows strik...
There is evidence that mental stress can trigger myocardial infarction. Even though the underlying m...
Neurovascular responses to mental stress have been linked to several cardiovascular diseases, includ...
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the western world. As accumulating evidence ...
AIM: We studied the effects of mental stress on the tone of the radial artery, a medium-sized muscul...
BACKGROUND: The role of cardiovascular reactivity to study hypertension, and the assessment methods,...
AbstractObjectives. We sought to investigate the mechanism of a mental stress–induced fall in left v...
SUMMARY Mental stress, which increases blood pressure and heart rate, increases forearm blood flow b...
Abstract BACKGROUND: The role of cardiovascular reactivity to study hypertension, and the assessmen...
Mental stress elicits a robust and consistent forearm vasodilation, but vascular reactivity in the c...
CARDIOVASCULAR AND SYMPATHO-ADRENAL RESPONSES TO MENTAL STRESS, with special reference to the regula...
Background: Stress is a risk factor for musculoskeletal pain. We wanted to explore stress related ph...
The purpose of this study was to determine neurovascular responses to mental stress (MS) in the supi...
Research indicates that individuals may experience a rise (positive responders) or fall (negative re...