Authors
Brian N Chin, Kristina D Dickman, Rachel E Koffer, Sheldon Cohen, Martica H Hall, Thomas W Kamarck
Publication date
2022/4/1
Journal
Psychosomatic medicine
Volume
84
Issue
3
Pages
368-373
Publisher
LWW
Description
Objective
Socially integrated individuals are at lower risk of cardiovascular disease morbidity and mortality compared with their more isolated counterparts. This association may be due, in part, to the effect of social integration on nocturnal blood pressure (BP) decline or “dipping,” a physiological process associated with decreased disease risk. However, the pathways linking social integration with nocturnal BP dipping are unknown. We sought to replicate the association between social integration and BP dipping, and to test whether sleep characteristics (duration, regularity, continuity) and/or daily social interactions (frequency, valence) helped to explain the association.
Methods
A total of 391 healthy midlife adults completed an actigraphy assessment protocol that measured sleep. During four actigraphy assessment days, participants also completed ambulatory BP monitoring and ecological momentary assessment …
Total citations
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