Abstract

BackgroundPossible mechanisms behind psychophysiological hyperreactivity may be located at a cognitive-emotional level. Several personality traits have been associated with increased cardiovascular reactivity. Subjects with white coat hypertension, which may constitute a kind of hyperreactivity, are found to suppress their emotions and adapt to the surroundings to a larger extent than controls.We hypothesized in this study that a) stress reactivity is related to personality, and that b) responses to cold pressor test (CPT) and mental stress test (MST) are associated with different personality traits.Methods87 men were selected from the 1st, 50th and 99th percentile of a blood pressure screening. Cardiovascular and catecholamine responses to MST and CPT were recorded. Fifteen personality traits were assessed using the Karolinska Scale of Personality. Possible independent explanatory predictors for cardiovascular and catecholamine variables at baseline and during stress were analyzed in multiple linear regression analyses using a stepwise forward procedure.ResultsMultiple regression analyses showed that muscular tension (β = 0.298, p = 0.004), irritability (β = 0.282, p = 0.016), detachment (β = 0.272, p = 0.017), psychasthenia (β = 0.234, p = 0.031) and somatic anxiety (β = 0.225, p = 0.046) were significant explanatory variables of reactivity to CPT. During MST, verbal aggression (β = -0.252, 0.031) and detachment (β = 0.253, p = 0.044) were significant predictors of norepinephrine and diastolic blood pressure response, respectively.Based on KSP-trait quartiles, delta (Δ) systolic (p = 0.025) and Δ diastolic blood pressure (p = 0.003) during MST were related to detachment score, with the highest reactivity in the 4th quartile, while Δ norepinephrine was significantly related to muscular tension (p = 0.033). Δ systolic and Δ diastolic blood pressure responses to CPT were dependent on detachment (p = 0.049 and p = 0.011, respectively) and psychasthenia (p = 0.020 and p = 0.015), while high verbal aggression was associated with lower reactivity measured by Δ norepinephrine (p = 0.037).ConclusionThe present study indicates that stress reactivity is clearly related to different personality traits, without any single trait being dominant over others. Furthermore, personality seems to have as much, or even more, importance of predicting responses to CPT than responses to MST.

Highlights

  • Possible mechanisms behind psychophysiological hyperreactivity may be located at a cognitive-emotional level

  • Based on Karolinska Scale of Personality (KSP)-trait quartiles, delta (Δ) systolic (p = 0.025) and Δ diastolic blood pressure (p = 0.003) during mental arithmetic stress test (MST) were related to detachment score, with the highest reactivity in the 4th quartile, while Δ norepinephrine was significantly related to muscular tension (p = 0.033)

  • The present study indicates that stress reactivity is clearly related to different personality traits, without any single trait being dominant over others

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Summary

Introduction

Possible mechanisms behind psychophysiological hyperreactivity may be located at a cognitive-emotional level. We have previously demonstrated that blood pressure level at a military draft screening in healthy, young men reflects blood pressure, heart rate and arterial catecholamine reactivity to a mental arithmetic stress test (MST) [1]. This differentiated response pattern was not seen during a cold pressor test (CPT) or an orthostatic test, which are believed to be more physical tests, compared to MST. White coat hypertension is a kind of hyperreactivity, and is related to a larger degree of suppressing own emotions and adaptation to the surroundings [5]. A recent study, exposing low- and high systolic blood pressure reactors to a Stroop stress test while performing functional MRI, revealed increased activity of the posterior cingulate cortex in the high reactors [6]

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