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147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of exercise and weight loss on cardiovascular responses during mental stress in mildly to moderately overweight patients with elevated blood pressure. Ninety-nine men and women with high normal or unmedicated stage 1 to stage 2 hypertension (systolic blood pressure 130 to 179 mm Hg, diastolic blood pressure 85 to 109 mm Hg) underwent a battery of mental stress tests, including simulated public speaking, anger recall interview, mirror trace, and cold pressor, before and after a 6-month treatment program. Subjects were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 treatments: (1) aerobic exercise, (2) weight management combining aerobic exercise with a behavioral weight loss program, or (3) waiting list control group. After 6 months, compared with control subjects, participants in both active treatment groups had lower levels of systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, total peripheral resistance, and heart rate at rest and during mental stress. Compared with subjects in the control group, subjects in the exercise and weight management groups also had greater resting stroke volume and cardiac output. Diastolic blood pressure was lower for the weight management group than for the exercise-only group during all mental stress tasks. These results demonstrate that exercise, particularly when combined with a weight loss program, can lower both resting and stress-induced blood pressure levels and produce a favorable hemodynamic pattern resembling that targeted for antihypertensive therapy.
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PMID:Effects of exercise and weight loss on mental stress-induced cardiovascular responses in individuals with high blood pressure. 1094 73

Little is known about mental stress effects on the pulmonary circulation in health and disease. The current study was conducted to investigate whether pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) would further increase during standardized mental stress testing in patients with severe pulmonary hypertension. The study was a prospective analysis of seven patients (average age: 40 years, range from 21 to 56 years) with severe pulmonary hypertension (primary: n = 4, secondary forms: n = 3; resting mean pulmonary artery pressure ranged between 48 and 65 mmHg). Right heart catheterization for the determination of PAP, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCW) and cardiac output (CO) was clinically indicated (diagnostic workup, acute drug testing). Patients accomplished a standardized 10 min mental stress test (computer based, adaptive complex reaction-time task). Pulmonary haemodynamics during stress were compared to resting baseline. During mental stress mean PAP (+/- SEM) increased by 9.4 +/- 2.1 mmHg (P < 0.005). Pulmonary vascular resistance increased by 149 +/- 25 dyne s cm-5 (P < 0.001). Stroke volume decreased by 6.6 +/- 2.2 ml (P < 0.03). The data show that moderate mental stress increases right heart afterload in patients with severe pulmonary hypertension owing to elevation of PVR.
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PMID:Mental stress increases right heart afterload in severe pulmonary hypertension. 1110 Mar 96

Adequate characterization of hemodynamic and autonomic responses to physical and mental stress can elucidate underlying mechanisms of cardiovascular disease or anxiety disorders. We developed a physiological signal processing system for analysis of continuously recorded ECG, arterial blood pressure (BP), and respiratory signals using the programming language Matlab. Data collection devices are a 16-channel digital, physiological recorder (Vitaport), a finger arterial pressure transducer (Finapres), and a respiratory inductance plethysmograph (Respitrace). Besides the conventional analysis of the physiological channels, power spectral density and transfer functions of respiration, heart rate, and blood pressure variability are used to characterize respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), 0.10-Hz BP oscillatory activity (Mayer-waves), and baroreflex sensitivity. The arterial pressure transducer waveforms permit noninvasive estimation of stroke volume, cardiac output, and systemic vascular resistance. Time trends in spectral composition of indices are assessed using complex demodulation. Transient dynamic changes of cardiovascular parameters at the onset of stress and recovery periods are quantified using a regression breakpoint model that optimizes piecewise linear curve fitting. Approximate entropy (ApEn) is computed to quantify the degree of chaos in heartbeat dynamics. Using our signal processing system we found distinct response patterns in subgroups of patients with coronary artery disease or anxiety disorders, which were related to specific pharmacological and behavioral factors.
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PMID:Analysis of cardiovascular regulation. 1114 35

The validity and reliability of a new ambulatory impedance cardiograph (AZCG) was tested against the Minnesota Impedance Cardiograph (ZCG) during rest, orthostasis, and mental stress. Impedance cardiography allows noninvasive assessment of stroke volume, cardiac output, and systolic time intervals. A reliable ambulatory device would allow studies outside the lab. The devices were compared at two sites in healthy subjects. In both studies, the AZCG tracked changes across conditions closely with the ZCG (all Period x Device interactions were nonsignificant). Pearson rs, were .65 to .93, random intraclass correlation coefficients ranged from .80 to .98, indicating high degrees of shared measurement variance, and Cronbach's alpha indicated very good internal reliabilities (.91 to .99). Relative to the ZCG, the new AZCG appears to provide valid and reliable estimates of cardiac function at rest and during behavioral challenges in the lab.
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PMID:New ambulatory impedance cardiograph validated against the Minnesota Impedance Cardiograph. 1135 34

The relationship between stressful life events and the onset of disease is well documented. However, the role of psychological stress as a risk factor for life-threatening cerebrovascular insults such as stroke remains unspecified, but could explain individual variation in stroke outcome. To discover the mechanisms through which psychological stress may alter stroke outcome, we modeled the effects of chronic social intimidation and stress on ischemia-induced bcl-2 expression and early neuronal cell loss resulting from cerebral artery occlusion in mice (C57BL/6). The bcl-2 protooncogene promotes cell survival and protects against apoptosis and cellular necrosis in numerous neurodegenerative disorders, including stroke. In our study, male mice were chronically exposed to aggressive social stimuli before induction of a controlled, mild ischemic insult. Stressed mice expressed approximately 70% less bcl-2 mRNA than unstressed mice after ischemia. In addition, social stress greatly exacerbated infarct in wild-type mice but not in transgenic mice that constitutively express increased neuronal bcl-2. Despite similar postischemic concentrations of corticosterone, the major stress hormone in mice, high corticosterone concentrations were significantly correlated with larger infarcts in wild-type mice but not bcl-2 transgenic mice. Thus, enhanced bcl-2 expression offsets the potentially deleterious consequences of high postischemic plasma corticosterone concentrations. Taken together, these data demonstrate that stressful prestroke social milieu strongly compromises an endogenous molecular mechanism of neuroprotection in injured brain and offer a new behavioral target for stroke therapy.
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PMID:Social stress exacerbates stroke outcome by suppressing Bcl-2 expression. 1155 85

This study was designed to examine underlying hemodynamic changes that accompany observed reductions in heart rate (HR) response to mental stress following HR feedback training. Twenty-five college males, assigned to either a HR feedback training group (FB+) or a control group (FB-), were presented with a videogame and mental arithmetic challenge, as HR, blood pressure, and impedance cardiography-derived measures of hemodynamic functioning were recorded. During training, the FB+ group received HR feedback and the FB- group was not provided with HR feedback while playing a videogame. At posttraining, results revealed that the FB+ group exhibited significantly lower HR, systolic blood pressure, stroke volume, and total peripheral resistance responses to the videogame compared to that at pretraining. There was no evidence that the acquired skills generalized to a mental arithmetic task. These results suggest that HR feedback training is an effective method for reducing cardiovascular and hemodynamic responses to a mental stressor; however, the generalizability of this effect remains questionable.
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PMID:Changes in hemodynamic response to mental stress with heart rate feedback training. 1180 78

There have been reports of cases in which quality of life and loneliness of elderly people have been affected by interaction with the pet-type robot AIBO. In the present comparison between first and 20th sessions of activity with the pet-type robot, statistically significant improvements were observed in speech, emotional words and satisfaction index. The AKO loneliness scale value was 3.33 at the first session, and was 1.00 at the 20th session (statistically significant decrease). In a comparison of health-related QOL before and after interaction with AIBO, using the SF-36 survey, role function (RP) was statistically higher at the 20th session than at the first session. Evaluation by CgA, a mental stress index, showed a statistically significant decrease as the number of AIBO sessions increased. Case 1: The patient was a 68-year-old woman with chronic rheumatoid arthritis. Her AKO loneliness scale value was 4 on the first session and 1 on the 20th session. She said, "I do not think about anything while playing with the pet-type robot. It heals my mind." Case 2: The patient was a 74-year-old woman with cervical osteochondrosis. Her AKO loneliness scale value was 5 on the first session and 2 on the 20th session. She said, "The first time, I didn't like playing with the robot because I was depressed. After I had played with the robot several times, I felt good." Case 3: The patient was an 84-year-old man with cerebral apoplexy sequelae. His AKO loneliness scale value was 6 on the first session and 1 on the 20th session. He sang with the robot occasionally. The amount of conversation between him and his children greatly increased. Unlike animals, a pet robot does not carry the risk of bacterial infection. The present results suggest the possibility of using robots as a substitute for animal-assisted therapy and other psychosocial therapy in aseptic rooms, ICUs, children's wards, and special care wards for patients with dementia.
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PMID:[Maintenance and improvement of quality of life among elderly patients using a pet-type robot]. 1197 48

A wide variety of stresses are prevalent in the environment that could change the course and phenotypic expression of metabolic diseases. Amongst the various stresses the oxidative stress plays a pivotal role in the disease progression through free radical generation and may lead to various metabolic disorders such as non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular diseases, hypertension obesity, stroke, etc. Psychological stress has been implicated as a root cause of several psychosomatic disorders. Thus there cannot be a life without stress. Under such a scenario of stressful conditions further fueled by life style changes we propose to counteract any kind of stress by another milder form of stress that is likely to protect the cells from drastic effects of severe stress. Here we hypothesize that the beta-cells of islets of Langerhans can be protected from the diabetogenic insults and oxidative stress by inducing a protective stress response such as heat shock through dietary interventions.
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PMID:Can stress provide protection to pancreatic beta-cells and prevent diabetes? 1258 12

The association between psychological stress and stroke remains uncertain. We therefore examined whether or not one of the most extreme psychological stressors, the death of a child, was associated with the risk of stroke in a nationwide population-based follow-up study. All 21,062 parents who lost a child in Denmark during 1980-1996 were compared with 293,745 parents who had not lost a child. The overall adjusted relative risk (RR) of stroke was 1.00 (95% CI = 0.83-1.20) among the exposed after up to 18 years of follow-up. The RRs for fatal stroke and nonfatal stroke were 0.69 (95% CI = 0.37-1.26) and 1.03 (95% CI = 0.85-1.24), respectively. The RRs for hemorrhagic and nonhemorrhagic stroke were 1.02 (95% CI = 0.77-1.36) and 0.94 (95% CI = 0.74-1.20), respectively. The risk of stroke did not differ irrespective of whether the death of the child was unexpected or not. The death of a child was not associated with any substantially increased risk of stroke in the bereaved parents.
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PMID:Stroke in parents who lost a child: a nationwide follow-up study in Denmark. 1271 54

A transient forebrain ischemia produced a delayed neuronal death of the hippocampus pyramidal cells in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP). Long term exposure of rats to stress has been reported to induce deleterious effects on the brain including morphological neuronal degeneration in the hippocampus. The present study was designed to examine the effects of psychological and physical stress on the ischemia-related neuronal death and the effects of 5-hydroxytryptamine(4) (5-HT(4)) receptor antagonist. SHRSP were exposed to the psychological or physical stress for 60 min in the communication box once or repeatedly for 3 days and occluded. SB204070, a 5-HT(4) receptor antagonist was injected before the occlusion. Seven days after the occlusion, the number of the neurons damaged morphologically was examined. A transient bilateral carotid occlusion produced a neuronal death of the CA1 subfield of the hippocampus in a time-dependent manner between 3 and 10 min. A 4 min occlusion induced very little morphological damage and a 5 min one produced a significant neuronal death. Exposure of rats to the psychological stress during 60 min for 3 days before the ischemic insults damaged the pyramidal cells by 4 min ischemia much more than without stress. Physical stress daily for 3 times also increased the damaged neurons. Pretreatment of SB204070 0.1 mg/kg after the stress exposure for 3 days significantly decreased the neuronal damage exacerbated by the stress exposure; however, it did not alter the damage induced by 4 or 10 min occlusion without stress. These results suggest that the repeated exposure of animals to the stress dramatically exacerbates the neuronal death by a transient ischemia and the 5-HT(4) receptor may be involved in the stress-induced exacerbating mechanism of the neuronal damage.
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PMID:Involvement of 5-hydroxytryptamine4 receptor in the exacerbation of neuronal loss by psychological stress in the hippocampus of SHRSP with a transient ischemia. 1272 57


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