Study On Physiological Responses To Stress Reveals Gender Difference
Main Category: Anxiety / StressAlso Included In: Psychology / Psychiatry; Heart Disease; Hypertension
Article Date: 24 Mar 2010 - 6:00 PDT
'Study On Physiological Responses To Stress Reveals Gender Difference'
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Age and gender play a major role in how people respond to stress, according to a new study on 20-to-64-year-olds. Published in the journal Psychophysiology, the investigation was led by scientists from the Universite de Montreal and the Montreal Heart Institute in collaboration with colleagues from the Universite du Quebec a Montreal and McGill University.
"Our findings suggest that women who are more defensive are at increased cardiovascular risk, whereas low defensiveness appears to damage the health of older men," says Bianca D'Antono, a professor at the Université de Montréal Department of Psychiatry and a Montreal Heart Institute researcher.
Defensiveness is a trait characterized by avoidance, denial or repression of information perceived as threatening. In women, a strong defensive reaction to judgment from others or a threat to self-esteem will result in high blood pressure and heart rate. Contrarily, older men with low defensive reactions have a higher cardiovascular rates.
The study was conducted on 81 healthy working men and 118 women. According to Dr. Jean-Claude Tardif a Université de Montréal professor and Montreal Heart Institute researcher, the physiological response to stress in women and older men is linked to this desire of maintaining self-esteem and securing social bonds.
"The sense of belonging is a basic human need," says D'Antono. "Our findings suggest that socialization is innate and that belonging to a group contributed to the survival of our ancestors. Today, it is possible that most people view social exclusion as a threat to their existence. A strong defensive reaction is useful to maintain one's self-esteem faced with this potential threat."
As part of the experiment, participants completed four tasks of varying stress levels. The first task involved reading a neutral text on Antarctica's geography before a person of the same sex. The second and third tasks involved role-playing in which participants followed a script where they were sometimes agreeable and sometimes aggressive. The final task involved a non-scripted debate on abortion.
Heart rate and blood pressure were measured during each of these tasks as was the level of cortisol in saliva. Results showed that women and older men had elevated cardiovascular, autonomic and endocrine responses to stress - all potentially damaging to their health. The research team cautions, however, that more studies are needed to evaluate the long-term effects of defensiveness and its association to stress response patterns in disease development.
Partners in research:
This study was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Fonds de la recherche en santé du Québec.
Source:
Sylvain-Jacques Desjardins
University of Montreal
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/183347.php.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)
Poorly Written
posted by Margaret on 30 Mar 2010 at 2:40 pmThe people who did the study chose the word Defensiveness to describe situations that are not associated strongly with the word defensiveness so the article does not make sense. The researchers need to choose different words to describe the states of mind for both men and women in certain situations.
Additionally, it's as though the researchers and people who wrote the article have a fair to poor grasp of the English language so it's nearly impossible to grasp the meaning of their research
Makes No Sense
posted by Russ on 29 Mar 2010 at 6:25 pmThe article appears to contradict itself and makes no sense. At one point it states that older men have the reverse response compared to women and then goes on to say that they are the same and never really ties everything up regarding the original subject of defensiveness.
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