Individualized stress management for primary hypertension: a randomized trial.

OBJECTIVE To test the efficacy of individualized stress management for primary hypertension in a randomized clinical trial with the use of ambulatory blood pressure (BP) measures. METHODS Men and women aged 28 to 75 years with mean ambulatory BP greater than 140/90 mm Hg received 10 hours of individualized stress management by means of semistandardized treatment components. They were randomly assigned to immediate treatment (n = 27) or a wait list control group (n = 33). Participants on the wait list were subsequently offered treatment. Six-month follow-up data were available from 36 of the 45 participants who completed treatment. Measures were 24-hour ambulatory BP, lipid levels, weight, and psychological measures. RESULTS Blood pressure was significantly reduced in the immediate treatment group and did not change in control subjects (-6.1 vs +0.9 mm Hg for systolic and -4.3 vs +0.0 mm Hg for diastolic pressure). When the wait list control group was later treated, BP was similarly reduced by -7.8 and -5.2 mm Hg, and for the combined sample, total change at follow-up was -10.8 and -8.5 mm Hg. Level of BP at the beginning of treatment was correlated with BP change (r = 0.45 [P<.001] and 0.51 [P<.001], respectively), and amount of systolic BP change was positively correlated with reduction in psychological stress (r = 0.34) and change in anger coping styles (r = 0.35-0.41). CONCLUSIONS Individualized stress management is associated with ambulatory BP reduction. The effects were replicated and further improved by follow-up. Reductions in psychological stress and improved anger coping appear to mediate the reductions in BP change.

[1]  S. Manuck,et al.  Behaviorally-Evoked Cardiovascular Reactivity and Hypertension: Conceptual Issues and Potential Associations , 1990 .

[2]  Walter W. Cook,et al.  Proposed hostility and Pharisaic-virtue scales for the MMPI. , 1954 .

[3]  R. Juster,et al.  Prognostic value of ambulatory blood pressure measurements: further analyses. , 1989, Journal of hypertension. Supplement : official journal of the International Society of Hypertension.

[4]  Alan C. Wilson,et al.  Superiority of nonpharmacologic therapy compared to propranolol and placebo in men with mild hypertension: a randomized, prospective trial. , 1992, American heart journal.

[5]  R. Battista,et al.  Recommendations of the Canadian Consensus Conference on Non-Pharmacological Approaches to the Management of High Blood Pressure, Mar. 21-23, 1989, Halifax, Nova Scotia. , 1990, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.

[6]  B. Fletcher,et al.  Stress management for the healthy type A , 1987 .

[7]  J. Laragh,et al.  How common is white coat hypertension? , 1988, JAMA.

[8]  A. Mcgrady,et al.  Effects of group relaxation training and thermal biofeedback on blood pressure and related physiological and psychological variables in essential hypertension , 1994, Biofeedback and self-regulation.

[9]  Detection The sixth report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC VI) , 1997 .

[10]  W. Linden Autogenic Training: A Clinical Guide , 1990 .

[11]  F. Mee,et al.  Accuracy of the SpaceLabs 90207 determined by the British Hypertension Society protocol. , 1991, Journal of hypertension.

[12]  D. Johnston,et al.  Effect of stress management on blood pressure in mild primary hypertension. , 1993, BMJ.

[13]  J. Cutler,et al.  The 1988 report of the Joint National Committee on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure. , 1988, Archives of internal medicine.

[14]  P. Jin,et al.  Toward a reconceptualization of the law of initial value. , 1992, Psychological bulletin.

[15]  T. Kamarck,et al.  Measuring the Functional Components of Social Support , 1985 .

[16]  M. Lipsey,et al.  The efficacy of psychological, educational, and behavioral treatment. Confirmation from meta-analysis. , 1993, American Psychologist.

[17]  K. Davidson,et al.  Increasing constructive anger verbal behavior decreases resting blood pressure: A secondary analysis of a randomized controlled hostility intervention , 1999, International journal of behavioral medicine.

[18]  W. Linden,et al.  Clinical Effectiveness of Non-Drug Treatment for Hypertension: a Meta-Analysis , 1994, Annals of Behavioral Medicine.

[19]  B. T. Johnson,et al.  Elevated blood pressure and personality: a meta-analytic review. , 1996, Psychological bulletin.

[20]  C. Spielberger,et al.  Manual for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory , 1970 .

[21]  W. White,et al.  Average daily blood pressure, not office blood pressure, determines cardiac function in patients with hypertension. , 1989, JAMA.

[22]  D. Shapiro,et al.  Meta-analysis of comparative therapy outcome studies: a replication and refinement. , 1982, Psychological bulletin.

[23]  W. Linden,et al.  Stress management for patients with heart disease: a pilot study. , 1995, Heart & lung : the journal of critical care.

[24]  M. Sokolow,et al.  The prognostic value of ambulatory blood pressures. , 1983, JAMA.

[25]  M. Chesney,et al.  Relaxation Therapy for Hypertension: Design Effects and Treatment Effects , 1991 .

[26]  R. Weinshilboum,et al.  The sixth report of the Joint National Committee on prevention, detection, evaluation, and treatment of high blood pressure. , 1997, Archives of internal medicine.

[27]  W. Linden,et al.  Should we tell them when their blood pressure is up? , 1989, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.

[28]  A. Chockalingam,et al.  The Canadian consensus report on non-pharmacological approaches to the management of high blood pressure. , 1990, Clinical and experimental hypertension. Part A, Theory and practice.

[29]  L. Cronbach,et al.  How we should measure "change": Or should we? , 1970 .

[30]  G Parati,et al.  Relationship of 24-hour blood pressure mean and variability to severity of target-organ damage in hypertension. , 1987, Journal of hypertension.

[31]  R. M. Suinn Anxiety management training : a behavior therapy , 1990 .

[32]  R. Gorsuch,et al.  Efficacy of a self-directed behavioral health change program: Weight, body composition, cardiovascular fitness, blood pressure, health risk, and psychosocial mediating variables , 1991, Journal of Behavioral Medicine.

[33]  C. Taylor Psychological Perspectives of Essential Hypertension , 1985 .

[34]  G. Andrews,et al.  Hypertension: comparison of drug and non-drug treatments. , 1982, British medical journal.

[35]  G. Divine,et al.  Physiological, psychological, and behavioral factors and white coat hypertension. , 1990, Hypertension.

[36]  D F Klein,et al.  COGNITIVE THERAPY , 2016 .