All Stories

  1. The Perceived Stress Scale as a Measure of Stress: Decomposing Score Variance in Longitudinal Behavioral Medicine Studies
  2. Prospective Bidirectional Relations Between Depression and Metabolic Health: 30 Year Follow-up from the NHLBI CARDIA Study
  3. Mental Health, Ill-Defined Conditions, and Health Care Utilization Following Bereavement: A Prospective Case-Control Study
  4. The Interaction of Biology and Emotion: Uncovering a New Phenotype of Nonobstructive Coronary Artery Disease
  5. Cardiovascular Disorders
  6. How PTSD Affects the Whole Body and Increases Risk of Cardiovascular Disease
  7. Long-term Effects of Perceived Stress, Anxiety, and Anger on Hospitalizations or Death and Health Status in Heart Failure Patients
  8. Cardiac Sympathetic Activity by 123I-Meta-Iodobenzylguanidine Imaging in Women With Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction
  9. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) as a Systemic Disorder: Pathways to Cardiovascular Disease. Article in press, HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2021.
  10. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) as a Systemic Disorder: Pathways to Cardiovascular Disease. Article in press, HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2021.
  11. Psychological factors and cardiac repolarization instability during anger in implantable cardioverter defibrillator patients
  12. Somatic versus cognitive depressive symptoms as predictors of coronary artery disease among women with suspected ischemia: The women's ischemia syndrome evaluation
  13. Impact of Mental Stress and Anger on Indices of Diastolic Function in Patients With Heart Failure
  14. Psychological stress, cardiac symptoms, and cardiovascular risk in women with suspected ischaemia but no obstructive coronary disease
  15. Associations of perceived stress and state anger with symptom burden and functional status in patients with heart failure
  16. Daily variation in post traumatic stress symptoms in individuals with and without probable post traumatic stress disorder
  17. Mental stress peripheral vascular reactivity is elevated in women with coronary vascular dysfunction: Results from the NHLBI-sponsored Cardiac Autonomic Nervous System (CANS) study
  18. Anger, hostility, and hospitalizations in patients with heart failure.
  19. A New Clinically Applicable Measure of Functional Status in Patients With Heart Failure
  20. Psychological stress and short-term hospitalisations or death in patients with heart failure
  21. Psychosocial predictors of long-term mortality among women with suspected myocardial ischemia: the NHLBI-sponsored Women’s Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation
  22. High Concordance Between Mental Stress–Induced and Adenosine-Induced Myocardial Ischemia Assessed Using SPECT in Heart Failure Patients: Hemodynamic and Biomarker Correlates
  23. Prognostic significance of active and modified forms of endothelin 1 in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction
  24. Depression, Dietary Habits, and Cardiovascular Events Among Women with Suspected Myocardial Ischemia
  25. Prognostic Significance of Active and Modified Forms of Endothelin 1 in Patients with Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction
  26. Congruity between Mental Stress-Induced and Adenosine-Induced Myocardial Ischemia Assessed Using SPECT in Heart Failure Patients
  27. Effects of Acute and Chronic Stress on Heart Failure Functional Status, Hospitalization and Mortality
  28. Current Perspective on Mental Stress–Induced Myocardial Ischemia
  29. Cardiovascular Disorders and Behavior
  30. Anxiety associations with cardiac symptoms, angiographic disease severity, and healthcare utilization: The NHLBI-sponsored Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation
  31. Anginal Symptoms, Coronary Artery Disease, and Adverse Outcomes in Black and White Women: The NHLBI-Sponsored Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation (WISE) Study
  32. Clinical Implications of the Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation: Inter-Relationships Between Symptoms, Psychosocial Factors and Cardiovascular Outcomes
  33. Psychological and Physiological Predictors of Angina During Exercise-Induced Ischemia in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease
  34. Psychology and Medicine David S. Krantz and David C. Glass
  35. Three strategies for bridging different levels of analysis and embracing the biopsychosocial model.
  36. Hostile attribution is associated with increased galectin-3 in heart failure patients
  37. Combining Psychosocial Data to Improve Prediction of Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors and Events
  38. Depression 3 and 9 months after discharge is less common in cardiac patients who are receiving statins at discharge
  39. Relationships Between Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors and Depressive Symptoms as Predictors of Cardiovascular Disease Events in Women
  40. Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression Are Correlates of Angina Pectoris by Recent History and an Ischemia-Positive Treadmill Test in Patients with Documented Coronary Artery Disease in the Pimi Study
  41. Self-Rated Versus Objective Health Indicators as Predictors of Major Cardiovascular Events: The NHLBI-Sponsored Women’s Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation
  42. Comorbid Depression and Anxiety Symptoms as Predictors of Cardiovascular Events: Results From the NHLBI-Sponsored Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation (WISE) Study
  43. Association Between Symptoms of Depression and Anxiety With Heart Rate Variability in Patients With Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators
  44. Psychotropic medication use and risk of adverse cardiovascular events in women with suspected coronary artery disease: outcomes from the Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation (WISE) study
  45. Depressive Symptom Dimensions and Cardiovascular Prognosis Among Women With Suspected Myocardial Ischemia
  46. Depression and Cardiovascular Health Care Costs Among Women With Suspected Myocardial Ischemia
  47. QT Variability during Rest and Exercise in Patients with Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators and Healthy Controls
  48. Major Life Changes Before and After the Onset of Chronic Daily Headache: A Population-Based Study
  49. Social Networks and Incident Stroke Among Women With Suspected Myocardial Ischemia
  50. Effects of Acute Mental Stress and Exercise on Inflammatory Markers in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease and Healthy Controls
  51. Depression, the Metabolic Syndrome and Cardiovascular Risk
  52. Optimism, Stress, and Coping in CAD Patients and Healthy Controls
  53. Mental Stress Hemodynamic Responses and Myocardial Ischemia: Does Left Ventricular Dysfunction Alter These Relationships?
  54. Anger, Hostility, and Cardiac Symptoms in Women with Suspected Coronary Artery Disease: The Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation (WISE) Study
  55. Mental Stress and Coronary Artery Disease: A Multidisciplinary Guide
  56. President's Column: Opportunities and Changes
  57. Professional Identity in an Interdisciplinary Field
  58. Center for Deployment Psychology: Evaluating the First Year and Beyond
  59. Relationship of socioeconomic markers to daily life ischemia and blood pressure reactivity in coronary artery disease patients
  60. Hostility Scores Are Associated With Increased Risk of Cardiovascular Events in Women Undergoing Coronary Angiography: A Report from the NHLBI-Sponsored WISE Study
  61. Social Network and Coronary Artery Calcification in Asymptomatic Individuals
  62. Comparison of mental stress–induced myocardial ischemia in coronary artery disease patients with versus without left ventricular dysfunction*
  63. 2005 Outstanding Contributions to Health Psychology Award: James A. Blumenthal, PhD
  64. Effects of Acute Mental Stress and Exercise on T-Wave Alternans in Patients With Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators and Controls
  65. Kk
  66. Technological and Medical Advances: Implications for Health Psychology.
  67. Effects of mental stress on flow-mediated brachial arterial dilation and influence of behavioral factors and hypercholesterolemia in subjects without cardiovascular disease**The opinions and assertions expressed herein are those of the authors and are ...
  68. Coronary Heart Disease and Hypertension
  69. Mental Stress–Induced Ischemia and All-Cause Mortality in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease
  70. Effects of Psychological and Social Factors on Organic Disease: A Critical Assessment of Research on Coronary Heart Disease
  71. Diseases of the circulatory system.
  72. Changes in heart rate and heart rate variability before ambulatory ischemic events11The opinions and assertions expressed herein are those of the authors and are not to be construed as reflecting the views of the USUHS or the US Department of Defense.
  73. Effects of mental stress on coronary epicardial vasomotion and flow velocity in coronary artery disease: relationship with hemodynamic stress responses11The opinions and assertions expressed herein are those of the authors and should not be construed a...
  74. Drugs: beta-blockers
  75. Hostility and Type A behaviour in coronary artery disease
  76. Frontal electrocortical and cardiovascular reactivity during happiness and anger
  77. Effects of Mental Stress in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease
  78. Relationship between left ventricular mass and hemodynamic responses to physical and mental stress☆
  79. Prognostic value of mental stress testing in coronary artery disease∗∗The opinions and assertions expressed herein are those of the authors and are not to be construed as reflecting the views of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences,...
  80. Relationship among mental stress–induced ischemia and ischemia during daily life and during exercise: the Psychophysiologic Investigations of Myocardial Ischemia (PIMI) Study
  81. Cardiovascular stress response and coronary artery disease: Evidence of an adverse postmenopausal effect in women
  82. Cardiovascular Disorders
  83. Reproducibility of Mental Stress-Induced Myocardial Ischemia in the Psychophysiological Investigations of Myocardial Ischemia (PIMI)
  84. Mental Stress-Induced Myocardial Ischemia and Cardiac Events
  85. Transient coronary occlusion with mental stress
  86. Defensive hostility, gender and cardiovascular levels and responses to stress
  87. Mental stress--induced myocardial ischemia and cardiac events
  88. MENTAL STRESS AS A TRIGGER OF MYOCARDIAL ISCHEMIA AND INFARCTION**Preparation of this article was assisted by a grant from the NIH (HL47337) and USUHS grant RO7233. The opinions and assertions expressed herein are those of the authors and are not to be...
  89. The circadian variation of cardiovascular stress levels and reactivity: Relationships to individual differences in morningness/eveningness
  90. The impact of disease severity on the informed consent process in clinical research
  91. Triggers of myocardial ischemia during daily life in patients with coronary artery disease: Physical and mental activities, anger and smoking
  92. Ambulatory blood pressure and stress reactivity predict left ventricular mass
  93. Time course and mechanisms of decreased plasma volume during acute psychological stress and postural change in humans
  94. Mental Stress–Induced Ischemia in the Laboratory and Ambulatory Ischemia During Daily Life
  95. Person environment interactions are alive and well in health psychology
  96. Prothrombotic Effects of Environmental Stress
  97. Defensive hostility: Relationship to multiple markers of cardiac ischemia in patients with coronary disease.
  98. Health Psychology: 1995–1999.
  99. Health Psychology: A Status Report on the Division's Journal
  100. Induction of silent myocardial ischemia with mental stress testing: Relation to the triggers of ischemia during daily life activities to ischemic functional severity
  101. Triggers of angina and ST-segment depression in ambulatory patients with coronary artery disease: Evidence for an uncoupling of angina and ischemia
  102. Hostility and Anger in Cornonary Artery Disease
  103. Hostility and Anger in Coronary Artery Disease
  104. "Health Psychology": The Journal's Next Five Years
  105. Effects of acute mental stress on serum lipids: mediating effects of plasma volume.
  106. Behavior change and compliance: keys to improving cardiovascular health. Workshop VI. AHA Prevention Conference III.
  107. Automated physical activity monitoring: Validation and comparison with physiological and self-report measures
  108. Hostility and myocardial ischemia in coronary artery disease patients: evaluation by gender and ischemic index.
  109. The Effect of Atherosclerosis on the Vasomotor Response of Coronary Arteries to Mental Stress
  110. Behavioral Triggers of Silent and Symptomatic Myocardial Ischemia
  111. The relationship between myocardial hypoperfusion and the daily life triggers of myocardial ischemia
  112. Individual Differences in Behaviorally Evoked Cardiovascular Response: Temporal Stability and Hemodynamic Patterning
  113. Mental stress as an acute trigger of ischemic left ventricular dysfunction and blood pressure elevation in coronary artery disease
  114. Development of a diary for use with ambulatory monitoring of mood, activities, and physiological function
  115. Transient left ventricular dysfunction during provocative mental stress in patients with coronary artery disease
  116. Effects of Beta-Adrenergic Activity on T-Wave Amplitude
  117. Environmental Influences on Mental Health
  118. Biobehavioral aspects of cardiovascular disease: Progress and prospects.
  119. Biobehavioral research on cardiovascular disorders.
  120. The Social Context of Stress and Behavioral Medicine Research
  121. Speaking, Stress, and the Induction of Myocardial Ischemia
  122. Research Frontiers in Behavioral Medicine
  123. Mental Stress and the Induction of Silent Myocardial Ischemia in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease
  124. Short-term behavioral effects of beta-adrenergic medications in men with mild hypertension
  125. Environmental stress, reactivity and ischaemic heart disease
  126. Environmental stress and biobehavioral antecedents of coronary heart disease.
  127. Stability and Change in Type A Components and Cardiovascular Reactivity in Medical Students During Periods of Academic Stress1
  128. Some Cautions for Research on Personality and Health
  129. Effects of beta-adrenergic stimulation and blockade on cardiovascular reactivity, affect, and type A behavior.
  130. The antianxiety effect of beta-blockers on punished responding
  131. An Overview of the Stress Field
  132. Memory performance by mild hypertensives following beta-adrenergic blockade
  133. Behavior, Health, and Environmental Stress
  134. Contextual Analyses of Environmental Stress
  135. Correlational Field Methodology in the Study of Stress
  136. Environmental Stress and Cognitive Performance
  137. Environmental Stress and Health
  138. Personal Control and Enviromental Stress
  139. Personality, Cardiovascular Disorders, and Illness Behaviour
  140. Review of Behavioral health: A handbook of health enhancement and disease prevention.
  141. Summary and Implications
  142. Bsehavioral Effects of Beta Blockers
  143. Stress Management
  144. Health Psychology
  145. Research committee
  146. Research committee
  147. Measures of acute physiologic reactivity to behavioral stimuli: Assessment and critique
  148. An Update on Coronary-Prone Behavior
  149. Acute psychophysiologic reactivity and risk of cardiovascular disease: A review and methodologic critique.
  150. BEHAVIORAL CORRELATES OF ANGIOGRAPHY
  151. Teaching Psychology in the Medical Curriculum: Students' Perceptions of a Basic Science Course in Medical Psychology
  152. David S. Krantz: Distinguished Scientific Award for an Early Career Contribution to Psychology.
  153. Psychobiological substrates of the Type A behavior pattern.
  154. Propranolol Medication among Coronary Patients: Relationship to Type a Behavior and Cardiovascular Response
  155. Effects of Control Over Aversive Stimulation and Type A Behavior on Cardiovascular and Plasma Catecholamine Responses
  156. Type A Behavior and Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery: Intraoperative Blood Pressure and Perioperative Complications
  157. Perspectives on the interface between psychology and public health.
  158. Unique and common variance in Structured Interview and Jenkins Activity Survey measures of Type A behavior pattern.
  159. Extent of Coronary Atherosclerosis, Type A Behavior, and Cardiovascular Response to Social Interaction
  160. Review essay
  161. Aircraft noise and children: Longitudinal and cross-sectional evidence on adaptation to noise and the effectiveness of noise abatement.
  162. Effects of Types of Challenge on Pressor and Heart Rate Responses in Type A and B Women
  163. Cognitive Processes and Recovery from Heart Attack: A Review and Theoretical Analysis
  164. Physiological, motivational, and cognitive effects of aircraft noise on children: Moving from the laboratory to the field.
  165. Assessment of preferences for self-treatment and information in health care.
  166. Krantz Health Opinion Survey
  167. Psychological Correlates of Progression of Atherosclerosis in Men
  168. A Naturalistic Study of Social Influences on Meal Size among Moderately Obese and Nonobese Subjects
  169. Information, choice, and reactions to stress: A field experiment in a blood bank with laboratory analogue.
  170. Locus of control and the effects of success and failure in young and community-residing aged women1
  171. Resemblances of Twins and Their Parents in Pattern A Behavior
  172. Effects of inescapable shock in the rat: Learned helplessness or response competition
  173. Helplessness, stress level, and the coronary-prone behavior pattern
  174. Perceived control of aversive stimulation and the reduction of stress responses1
  175. Psychosocial risk factors for coronary heart disease: Pathophysiologic mechanisms.
  176. Heart Disease and Type A Behavior