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首页> 外文期刊>The journals of gerontology.Series A. Biological sciences and medical sciences >Race, psychosocial factors, and aortic pulse wave velocity: the Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study.
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Race, psychosocial factors, and aortic pulse wave velocity: the Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study.

机译:种族,社会心理因素和主动脉脉搏波速度:健康,衰老和身体成分研究。

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BACKGROUND: Increasingly, researchers have begun to explore pathways through which psychosocial factors might influence cardiovascular disease, with some emphasis on early markers. The current study examined the cross-sectional association between psychosocial factors and aortic pulse wave velocity (an early marker of cardiovascular disease) in a biracial cohort of older adults. We were particularly interested in determining whether the association between psychosocial factors and aortic pulse wave velocity differed for older blacks compared with whites. METHODS: Participants were 2,488 (40% black and 52% female) older adults from the Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study. Carotid-femoral aortic pulse wave velocity was assessed using standard methodologies. Depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, negative life events, and inadequate emotional support were assessed, and a summary psychosocial risk index was created. RESULTS: In multivariable linear regression models, psychosocial risk was not associated with aortic pulse wave velocity (Estimate [Est] = .00, p = .83), but there was a significant Race x Psychosocial risk interaction (Est = .07, p = .01), after adjusting for age, race, sex, and education. Further analyses revealed that this association was driven by the inadequate emotional support component of psychosocial risk (Race x Inadequate emotional support, p = .005). In race-stratified analyses, inadequate emotional support was associated with higher levels of arterial stiffness in older blacks (Est = .05, p = .04) but not whites (Est = -.04, p = .13). This association persisted after adjusting for demographics, cardiovascular risk factors, and social network characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that older blacks may be particularly vulnerable to the effects of inadequate emotional support on vascular health. Interventions aimed at increasing social support among this population might be beneficial in reducing cardiovascular disease risk.
机译:背景:研究人员越来越多地探索心理社会因素可能影响心血管疾病的途径,其中一些重点放在早期标记上。当前的研究在老年人的混血儿队列中研究了社会心理因素与主动脉脉搏波速度(心血管疾病的早期标志)之间的横断面关联。我们特别感兴趣的是确定老年黑人与白人相比,社会心理因素与主动脉脉搏波速度之间的关联是否不同。方法:根据健康,衰老和身体成分研究,参与者为2,488名(40%的黑人和52%的女性)老年人。使用标准方法评估颈股大动脉脉搏波速度。评估了抑郁症状,焦虑症状,负面生活事件和情感支持不足,并创建了汇总的社会心理风险指数。结果:在多变量线性回归模型中,心理心理风险与主动脉脉搏波速度无关(Estimate [Est] = .00,p = .83),但存在显着的种族x心理社会风险相互作用(Est = .07,p) = .01),针对年龄,种族,性别和教育程度进行了调整。进一步的分析表明,这种联系是由心理社会风险的情感支持不足引起的(Race x情感支持不足,p = .005)。在种族分层的分析中,较老的黑人(Est = .05,p = .04)而不是白人(Est = -.04,p = .13),情绪支持不足与较高的动脉僵硬度相关。在调整了人口统计资料,心血管危险因素和社交网络特征后,这种关联仍然存在。结论:研究结果表明,年龄较大的黑人可能特别容易受到情绪支持不足对血管健康的影响。旨在增加这一人群的社会支持的干预措施可能会降低心血管疾病的风险。

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