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The type a behavior pattern, sex differences, and cardiovascular response to and recovery from stress

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Abstract

Sixty-one subjects performed a Stroop Color-Word Interference task, a mental arithmetic task (serial subtraction of 7s), and a shock avoidance task (repeating digits backward while expecting to be shocked for mistakes). Systolic and diastolic blood pressure and pulse rate were recorded while subjects anticipated, undertook, and recovered from the shock avoidance task, and undertook and recovered from the Stroop and mental arithmetic tasks. The results revealed that, compared to Type B subjects, Type A subjects manifested higher diastolic blood pressure during the Stroop and shock avoidance tasks and higher pulse rate following the mental arithmetic and shock avoidance tasks. No significant interactions were found between sex and A/B Type. The results are congruent with the notion that greater sympathetic nervous system activity among Type A individuals, both men and women, contributes to greater coronary atherosclerosis and heart disease in this group.

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The research reported here was supported by a University of Kansas General Research allocation No. 3115-x0-0038 to the second author. The authors wish to thank Thomas G. Burish, David S. Holmes, and Raymond Zurawski for their helpful comments on an earlier draft of the manuscript.

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Jorgensen, R.S., Houston, B.K. The type a behavior pattern, sex differences, and cardiovascular response to and recovery from stress. Motivation and Emotion 5, 201–214 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00993884

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