4.3 Article

Dispositional Optimism and Cardiovascular Reactivity Accompanying Anger and Sadness in Young Adults

Journal

ANNALS OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE
Volume 53, Issue 5, Pages 466-475

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/abm/kay058

Keywords

Optimism; Pessimism; Stress; Emotion; Cardiovascular reactivity

Funding

  1. Rutgers University Academic Excellence Fund
  2. Charles and Johanna Busch Biomedical Research Award

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Background Dispositional optimism, a generalized expectation for positive outcomes, appears to promote physical health and well-being, including positive effects on cardiovascular disease outcomes. Mechanisms may involve adaptive responses to psychological stressors that dampen their physiological impact. Purpose This study investigated (i) whether individual differences in optimism are associated with attenuated cardiovascular reactivity (CVR); (ii) whether the CVR moderating effect of optimism differs for two stress emotions, anger and sadness; and (iii) whether separate measures of optimism and pessimism, and the more commonly used measure that combines them, differ in their relationships with CVR. Methods The Life Orientation Test-Revised (LOT-R) was used to provide an overall dispositional optimism score and subscale scores separately assessing optimism and pessimism. These predictors were examined in relation to cardiovascular responses evoked by a stressful autobiographical recall task. Task instructions were manipulated within subjects to produce anger and sadness. CVR measures were systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP) and heart rate (HR). Results Dispositional optimism was inversely associated with SBP and HR (but not DBP) elevations while participants related both anger- and sadness-inducing events. There was some indication that these associations were stronger for sadness than for anger, and that the LOT-R optimism subscale was a better predictor of CVR than its pessimism subscale. Conclusions These findings add to the understanding of health-promoting effects of dispositional optimism by addressing relationships of optimism and pessimism with cardiovascular concomitants of anger and sadness that are thought to contribute to heart disease. More optimistic college students showed smaller increases in systolic blood pressure and heart rate, compared to less optimistic students, while re-experiencing anger- and sadness-inducing events.

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