Perceived stress is associated with impaired artery elasticity: An observational study from the Vara- Skövde cohort
Gábor Szaló, Maria C.M. Eriksson, Margareta Hellgren, Kristin Ottarsdottir, Ying Li, Yun Chen, Karin Rådholm, Lyndia C. Brumback, Matthew Allison, Ulf Lindblad, Bledar Daka

TL;DR
This study finds that higher perceived stress is linked to reduced artery elasticity in middle-aged adults not taking blood pressure medication.
Contribution
The study identifies a novel association between perceived stress and arterial elasticity in individuals not on antihypertensive drugs.
Findings
Higher perceived stress was associated with lower small artery elasticity in individuals not taking antihypertensive medication.
Each 1-SD increase in perceived stress was linked to 25% higher odds of impaired artery elasticity.
The association was not significant after adjusting for physical activity.
Abstract
This study aims to determine the association between perceived mental stress and arterial elasticity. Additionally, we will investigate potential effect modifications of sex and antihypertensive medication on this association. Cross-sectional observational study based on the Vara- Skövde Cohort. After excluding individuals with missing information on perceived stress or vascular elasticity, 1015 individuals remained. Perceived stress was evaluated with the Perceived Stress Scale-10 (PSS-10). Small Artery Elasticity Index (SAEI or C2) was estimated from a Windkessel model obtained by applanation tonometry over the arteria radialis. Impaired artery elasticity was defined as the lowest sex-specific quartile of C2. The associations between perceived stress and artery elasticity indices were investigated using linear and logistic regressions with adjustments for possible confounding in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiovascular Health and Disease Prevention · Bone health and osteoporosis research · Cardiac Health and Mental Health
