Young borderline hypertensives are hyperreactive to mental arithmetic stress: spectral analysis of R-R intervals.

To investigate whether sympathetic tone and its reactivity to stress are increased in borderline hypertension, we compared pressor and autonomic nervous responses to mental arithmetic stress in male borderline hypertensives (BH) and normotensive volunteers (NT). Three age groups, 30, 40 and 50-year-old groups, which included 30 to 39, 40 to 49 and 50 to 59-year-old subjects, were studied. Fractional LF (%LF), fractional HF (%HF) and L/H, obtained from the power spectrum of R-R intervals, were used as indices of autonomic nervous function. Baseline autonomic nervous indices did not differ between NT and BH of any age group. Blood pressure rose higher during mental arithmetic stress in 50 than in 30-year-old NT but not in comparable age groups of BH. Pressor responses were augmented in BH compared to NT only in the 30-year-old group. However, the differences were not significant when pressor responses were expressed as percent increases in blood pressure. Both %L and L/H increased during arithmetic stress. The increase in %L did not differ between NT and BH but that in L/H (% delta L/H) was larger in 50 than in 30-year-old NT. % delta L/H was larger in BH than in NT only in the 30-year-old group. These findings suggest that both pressor and autonomic nervous responses to metal arithmetic stress were altered by aging and augmented in BH compared to NT in the 30-year-old group.

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