Hostile affect and casual blood pressure |
| |
Authors: | Wolfgang Linden Angela M. Lamensdorf |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Psychology , The University of British Columbia , Vancouver, B.C., Canada , V6T 1Y7 |
| |
Abstract: | Abstract The present study investigated the relation between hostile affect and casual blood pressure in men and women. Data were collected from two independent samples: (1) 204 university students, and (2) 175 adults from the community. Findings on blood pressure-hostile affect linkage are reported with age and body-mass index corrected values. Data were analyzed for subgroups split at the median for hostility and also for tercile subgroups. Median splits revealed no relationship between hostility and blood pressure. Systolic blood pressure tended to be highest in the medium and high hostility terciles. The diastolic pressure-hostility link in men represented a “V”-shaped curve. In women, there was no relationship. Heart rate levels were consistently unrelated to hostile affect. The importance of testing for linear as well as curvilinear relationships in future studies is highlighted. |
| |
Keywords: | Affect expression blood pressure hostility |
|
|