4.7 Article

Psychological Wellbeing and Aortic Stiffness Longitudinal Study

期刊

HYPERTENSION
卷 76, 期 3, 页码 675-682

出版社

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.119.14284

关键词

aged; association; biological factors; cardiovascular disease; longitudinal studies

资金

  1. British Heart Foundation [RG/16/11/32334]
  2. British Medical Research Council [MR/S011676, R024227]
  3. US National Institute on Aging [RF1AG062553, R01AG034454]
  4. JSPS KAKENHI [JP17KK0175]
  5. European Commission [613598]
  6. NordForsk, the Nordic Programme on Health and Welfare
  7. Helsinki Institute of Life Science
  8. Academy of Finland [311492]
  9. MRC [MR/S011676/1, MR/R024227/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigated 2 distinct aspects of positive wellbeing: affective wellbeing and eudaimonia with progression of aortic stiffness, an index of subclinical cardiovascular disease. A total of 4754 participants (mean age 65.3 years, 3466 men, and 1288 women) from the Whitehall II cohort study provided data on affective and eudaimonic wellbeing using subscales from the control, autonomy, self-realization and pleasure-19 questionnaire. Aortic stiffness was measured by aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV) at baseline (2008-2009) and 5 years later (2012-2013). Linear mixed models were used to measure the effect of affective and eudaimonic wellbeing on baseline PWV and 5-year PWV longitudinal change. A 1-SD higher eudaimonic wellbeing was associated with lower baseline PWV in men (beta=-0.100 m/s [95% CI=-0.169 to -0.032]), independent of social, behavioral, and biological factors. This association persisted over 5 years. No such association was found in women (beta=-0.029 m/s [95% CI=-0.126 to 0.069]). We did not find any association of positive wellbeing with change in PWV over time in either men or women. In older men, higher levels of eudaimonic wellbeing were associated with lower long-term levels of arterial stiffness. These findings support the notion that the pattern of association between positive wellbeing and cardiovascular health outcomes involves eudaimonic rather than affective wellbeing and is sex-specific.

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