SEX-DIFFERENCES IN CARDIOVASCULAR REACTIVITY AS A FUNCTION OF THE APPRAISED GENDER RELEVANCE OF THE STRESSOR

Citation
Sj. Lash et al., SEX-DIFFERENCES IN CARDIOVASCULAR REACTIVITY AS A FUNCTION OF THE APPRAISED GENDER RELEVANCE OF THE STRESSOR, Behavioral medicine, 21(2), 1995, pp. 86-94
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry,Psychiatry,"Behavioral Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
08964289
Volume
21
Issue
2
Year of publication
1995
Pages
86 - 94
Database
ISI
SICI code
0896-4289(1995)21:2<86:SICRAA>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
Previous research suggests that sex differences in cardiovascular reac tivity are a function of the gender relevance of the stressor. The aut hors examined the role of a stressor's gender relevance as a mediator of sex differences in cardiovascular reactivity. The cardiovascular re activity of 121 male and female college students to the cold-pressor t est was compared under feminine- and masculine-relevant stressor instr uctions. The women were expected to show greater cardiovascular reacti vity than the men were to the test relevant to women, whereas the men were expected to show greater cardiovascular reactivity than the women were to the masculine cold-pressor rest. Results supported these pred ictions for systolic blood pressure reactivity, but not heart rate rea ctivity. Diastolic blood pressure results were mixed. The women showed greater diastolic reactivity than the men did to the feminine-relevan t test, but the men did not show greater diastolic reactivity than the women did to the masculine test. The influence of sex differences in cognitive appraisal of situations on cardiovascular reactivity and cor onary heart disease is discussed