Larger acute fibrinogen and interleukin-6 responses to psychological stress predicted larger increases in ambulatory systolic blood pressure over a 3-year period.
Cohort (n=153)
Do stress-induced increases in interleukin-6 and fibrinogen predict ambulatory blood pressure at 3-year follow-up in individuals from the Whitehall II cohort?
Stress-induced increases in inflammatory markers (IL-6 and fibrinogen) independently predict higher ambulatory blood pressure at 3 years, suggesting a mechanism linking psychological stress to hypertension.
BACKGROUND: The biological mechanisms underlying the association between psychological stress and hypertension are poorly understood. Increased plasma concentrations of the inflammatory proteins interleukin-6 and fibrinogen are commonly reported both in hypertensive patients and in people subject to chronic psychological stress. Recent laboratory studies have also shown that acute psychological stress increases plasma interleukin-6 and fibrinogen concentrations in healthy individuals. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between stress-induced inflammatory responses and blood pressure using a longitudinal design. METHODS: Participants were 153 individuals from the Whitehall II cohort. Blood pressure, plasma interleukin-6 and fibrinogen were assessed in response to an acute laboratory stressor, and ambulatory blood pressure was monitored on a separate day. Three years later, a follow-up day of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was carried out. RESULTS: Individual differences in systolic pressure, fibrinogen and interleukin-6 stress responses predicted ambulatory blood pressure at the 3-year follow-up. Larger increases in ambulatory systolic pressure over the 3-year period were predicted by larger acute fibrinogen and interleukin-6 stress responses, independently of previous ambulatory blood pressure, acute blood pressure stress responses, age, sex, body mass and smoking. CONCLUSION: Given the important roles of interleukin-6 and fibrinogen in hypertensive pathophysiology, these results indicate that psychological stress could promote hypertension through stimulating these inflammatory proteins.
Brydon et al. (Fri,) conducted a cohort in Hypertension (n=153). Acute laboratory stressor (assessing interleukin-6 and fibrinogen responses) was evaluated on Ambulatory blood pressure at 3-year follow-up. Larger acute fibrinogen and interleukin-6 responses to psychological stress predicted larger increases in ambulatory systolic blood pressure over a 3-year period.