Hostility and sex differences in the magnitude, duration, and determinants of heart rate response to forehead cold pressor: parasympathetic aspects of risk.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Jerry Suls,et al. Anger, anxiety, and depression as risk factors for cardiovascular disease: the problems and implications of overlapping affective dispositions. , 2005, Psychological bulletin.
[2] Timothy W. Smith,et al. Mental activation of supportive ties, hostility, and cardiovascular reactivity to laboratory stress in young men and women. , 2004, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.
[3] K. Matthews,et al. Understanding the association between socioeconomic status and physical health: do negative emotions play a role? , 2003, Psychological bulletin.
[4] H. Demaree,et al. HOSTILITY AS A MODERATOR OF PHYSICAL REACTIVITY AND RECOVERY TO STRESS , 2002, The International journal of neuroscience.
[5] F. Rhodewalt,et al. Distinguishing Narcissism and Hostility: Similarities and Differences in Interpersonal Circumplex and Five-Factor Correlates , 2001, Journal of personality assessment.
[6] P A Shapiro,et al. Hostility, Gender, and Cardiac Autonomic Control , 2001, Psychosomatic medicine.
[7] Catherine M. Stoney,et al. Depressed Mood Is Related to High-Frequency Heart Rate Variability During Stressors , 2000, Psychosomatic medicine.
[8] A. Reyners,et al. Re-evaluation of the cold face test in humans , 2000, European Journal of Applied Physiology.
[9] F. Nieto,et al. Anger proneness predicts coronary heart disease risk: prospective analysis from the atherosclerosis risk in communities (ARIC) study. , 2000, Circulation.
[10] T. W. Smith,et al. Hostility and cardiovascular reactivity during marital interaction. , 1999, Psychosomatic medicine.
[11] J. Blumenthal,et al. Impact of psychological factors on the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease and implications for therapy. , 1999, Circulation.
[12] J. Salonen,et al. Anger expression and incident stroke: prospective evidence from the Kuopio ischemic heart disease study. , 1999, Stroke.
[13] P A Shapiro,et al. Cardiac autonomic control buffers blood pressure variability responses to challenge: a psychophysiologic model of coronary artery disease. , 1999, Psychosomatic medicine.
[14] Julian F. Thayer,et al. Anger inhibition, cardiovascular recovery, and vagal function: A model of the link between hostility and cardiovascular disease , 1998, Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.
[15] K. Matthews,et al. Are Hostility and Anxiety Associated With Carotid Atherosclerosis in Healthy Postmenopausal Women? , 1998, Psychosomatic medicine.
[16] H. Kobayashi,et al. Normalization of respiratory sinus arrhythmia by factoring in tidal volume. , 1998, Applied human science : journal of physiological anthropology.
[17] T. W. Smith,et al. Construct validation of health-relevant personality traits: Interpersonal circumplex and five-factor model analyses of the aggression questionnaire , 1998, International journal of behavioral medicine.
[18] M. Guyll,et al. Trait hostility and ambulatory cardiovascular activity: responses to social interaction. , 1998, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.
[19] T. Kamarck,et al. Exaggerated blood pressure responses during mental stress are associated with enhanced carotid atherosclerosis in middle-aged Finnish men: findings from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Study. , 1997, Circulation.
[20] H. Nagaraja,et al. Heart rate variability: origins, methods, and interpretive caveats. , 1997, Psychophysiology.
[21] I. Goldstein,et al. Daily mood states and ambulatory blood pressure. , 1997, Psychophysiology.
[22] D. Levy,et al. Impact of reduced heart rate variability on risk for cardiac events. The Framingham Heart Study. , 1996, Circulation.
[23] A. Alexandroff. Once more unto the breach. , 1996, Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy.
[24] P. Vokonas,et al. A prospective study of anger and coronary heart disease. The Normative Aging Study. , 1996, Circulation.
[25] L. J. Peacock,et al. Bradycardia during baroreflex stimulation and active or passive stressor tasks: cardiorespiratory fitness and hostility. , 1996, Psychophysiology.
[26] C. Turner,et al. A meta-analytic review of research on hostility and physical health. , 1996, Psychological bulletin.
[27] J. Gottdiener,et al. Triggers of myocardial ischemia during daily life in patients with coronary artery disease: physical and mental activities, anger and smoking. , 1996, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
[28] G. Breithardt,et al. Heart rate variability: standards of measurement, physiological interpretation and clinical use. Task Force of the European Society of Cardiology and the North American Society of Pacing and Electrophysiology. , 1996 .
[29] R. Coleman,et al. Mental stress-induced ischemia in the laboratory and ambulatory ischemia during daily life. Association and hemodynamic features. , 1995, Circulation.
[30] J. Cacioppo,et al. Individual differences in cardiac sympathetic control predict endocrine and immune responses to acute psychological stress. , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[31] M. Schroll,et al. Hostility, incidence of acute myocardial infarction, and mortality in a sample of older Danish men and women. , 1995, American journal of epidemiology.
[32] P. Armstrong,et al. Usefulness of ischemic response to mental stress in predicting silent myocardial ischemia during ambulatory monitoring. , 1995, The American journal of cardiology.
[33] J. Cacioppo,et al. The metrics of cardiac chronotropism: biometric perspectives. , 1995, Psychophysiology.
[34] J. Gottdiener,et al. Induction of silent myocardial ischemia with mental stress testing: relation to the triggers of ischemia during daily life activities and to ischemic functional severity. , 1994, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
[35] J. Cacioppo,et al. Autonomic cardiac control. II. Noninvasive indices and basal response as revealed by autonomic blockades. , 1994, Psychophysiology.
[36] J. Salonen,et al. Hostility and the progression of carotid atherosclerosis. , 1994, Psychosomatic medicine.
[37] L H Carney,et al. Time and frequency domain methods for heart rate variability analysis: a methodological comparison , 1994, Computers in Cardiology 1994.
[38] R. Williams,et al. Neurobiology, cellular and molecular biology, and psychosomatic medicine. , 1994, Psychosomatic medicine.
[39] N. Schneiderman,et al. Stimulus dimensions of the cold pressor test and the associated patterns of cardiovascular response. , 1994, Psychophysiology.
[40] J. Cacioppo,et al. Autonomic space and psychophysiological response. , 1994, Psychophysiology.
[41] S. Manuck. Cardiovascular reactivity in cardiovascular disease: “Once more unto the breach” , 1994, International journal of behavioral medicine.
[42] N. Schneiderman,et al. Patterns and stability of cardiovascular responses to variations of the cold pressor test. , 2007, Psychophysiology.
[43] D. Laude,et al. EFFECT OF BREATHING PATTERN ON BLOOD PRESSURE AND HEART RATE OSCILLATIONS IN HUMANS , 1993, Clinical and experimental pharmacology & physiology.
[44] K. Matthews,et al. Cardiovascular reactivity to stress predicts future blood pressure status. , 1993, Hypertension.
[45] J. Fleiss,et al. The ability of several short-term measures of RR variability to predict mortality after myocardial infarction. , 1993, Circulation.
[46] N. Schneiderman,et al. The cold pressor test: vascular and myocardial response patterns and their stability. , 1993, Psychophysiology.
[47] T. W. Smith,et al. Cynical hostility and cardiovascular reactivity during self‐disclosure. , 1993, Psychosomatic medicine.
[48] J. Fleiss,et al. Frequency domain measures of heart period variability to assess risk late after myocardial infarction. , 1993, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
[49] T. Kamarck,et al. Alternate cardiovascular baseline assessment techniques: vanilla or resting baseline. , 2007, Psychophysiology.
[50] S. Schanberg,et al. Accentuated Vagal Antagonism of β‐Adrenergic Effects on Ventricular Repolarization: Evidence of Weaker Antagonism in Hostile Type A Men , 1992, Circulation.
[51] A. Buss,et al. The aggression questionnaire. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[52] N. Schneiderman,et al. The reliability and specificity of delta versus residualized change as measures of cardiovascular reactivity to behavioral challenges. , 1991, Psychophysiology.
[53] J. Cacioppo,et al. Autonomic determinism: the modes of autonomic control, the doctrine of autonomic space, and the laws of autonomic constraint. , 1991, Psychological review.
[54] I. Kirsch,et al. Cognitive mediators of pain perception and tolerance. , 1991, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[55] N. Schneiderman,et al. Blood pressure reactivity and perception of pain during the forehead cold pressor test. , 1991, Psychophysiology.
[56] P. Grossman,et al. Prediction of tonic parasympathetic cardiac control using respiratory sinus arrhythmia: the need for respiratory control. , 1991, Psychophysiology.
[57] David S. Krantz,et al. Cardiovascular reactivity and mental stress‐induced myocardial ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease. , 1991, Psychosomatic medicine.
[58] D. Berman,et al. Comparison of physiologic ejection fraction responses to activities of daily living: implications for clinical testing. , 1990, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
[59] G. Berntson,et al. An approach to artifact identification: application to heart period data. , 1990, Psychophysiology.
[60] J A Downey,et al. The cold face test (diving reflex) in clinical autonomic assessment: methodological considerations and repeatability of responses. , 1990, Clinical science.
[61] J. Fahrenberg,et al. Methodological guidelines for impedance cardiography. , 1990, Psychophysiology.
[62] R B Williams,et al. Stimulus-specific patterns of cardiovascular reactivity in type A and B subjects: evidence for enhanced vagal reactivity in type B. , 1988, Psychophysiology.
[63] J. Miller,et al. Decreased heart rate variability and its association with increased mortality after acute myocardial infarction. , 1987, The American journal of cardiology.
[64] D. A. Kenny,et al. The moderator-mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[65] S. Manuck,et al. Acute psychophysiologic reactivity and risk of cardiovascular disease: a review and methodologic critique. , 1984, Psychological bulletin.
[66] S. Mitra,et al. Interpolated finite impulse response filters , 1984 .
[67] R. Williams,et al. Hostility, CHD incidence, and total mortality: a 25-year follow-up study of 255 physicians. , 1983, Psychosomatic medicine.
[68] J. Hirsch,et al. Respiratory sinus arrhythmia in humans: how breathing pattern modulates heart rate. , 1981, The American journal of physiology.
[69] R. Khurana,et al. Cold face test in the assessment of trigeminal‐brainstem‐ vagal function in humans , 1980, Annals of neurology.
[70] M. Hollenberg,et al. Impaired parasympathetic responses in patients after myocardial infarction. , 1976, The American journal of cardiology.
[71] Clemens S. Bernhardson,et al. 375: Type I Error Rates When Multiple Comparison Procedures Follow a Significant F Test of ANOVA , 1975 .
[72] J. Atkins,et al. THE DIVING REFLEX USED TO TREAT PAROXYSMAL ATRIAL TACHYCARDIA , 1975, The Lancet.
[73] S. White,et al. Nasopharyngeal reflexes: integrative analysis of evoked respiratory and cardiovascular effects. , 1973, The Australian journal of experimental biology and medical science.
[74] L. Benjamin,et al. Facts and artifacts in using analysis of covariance to "undo" the law of initial values. , 1967, Psychophysiology.
[75] A. Buss,et al. An inventory for assessing different kinds of hostility. , 1957, Journal of consulting psychology.
[76] Walter W. Cook,et al. Proposed hostility and Pharisaic-virtue scales for the MMPI. , 1954 .