Personality traits and circadian blood pressure patterns: a 7-year prospective study.

Psychosom Med

From the Florida State University College of Medicine (A.T., A.R.S.), Tallahassee, Florida; National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health (A.T., J.S., O.M., A.R.S., K.T., J.D., E.L., D.S.), Baltimore, Maryland; Istituto di Neurogenetica e Neurofarmacologia (M.M., M.G.P., F.C.), Consigli

Published: April 2014


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Article Abstract

Objective: A nighttime dip in blood pressure is associated with decreased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. We examined whether personality traits predict nighttime dipping blood pressure.

Methods: A community-based sample of 2848 adults from Sardinia (Italy) completed the Revised NEO Personality Inventory and 7 years later were examined with 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. The primary analyses examined the associations of personality traits with continuous and categorical measures of mean arterial, systolic, and diastolic blood pressure nighttime dipping.

Results: Agreeableness and conscientiousness were associated with more nocturnal blood pressure dipping (β = .05 [p = .025] and β = .07 [p < .001], respectively) and lower systolic blood pressure at night (β = -.05 [p = .018] and β = -.03 [p = .072], respectively). Nondippers were particularly more impulsive (p = .009), less trusting (p = .004), and less self-disciplined (p = .001), but there was no significant association between nocturnal dipping blood pressure and trait anxiety (p = .78) or depression (p = .59). The associations were stronger when comparing extreme dippers (nighttime drop ≥ 20%) to reverse dippers (nighttime increase in blood pressure). Indeed, scoring 1 standard deviation higher on conscientiousness was associated with approximately 40% reduced risk of reverse dipping (odds ratio = 1.43, confidence interval = 1.08-1.91).

Conclusions: We found evidence that reduced nighttime blood pressure dipping is associated with antagonism and impulsivity-related traits but not with measures of emotional vulnerability. The strongest associations were found with conscientiousness, a trait that may have a broad impact on cardiovascular health.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4008636PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PSY.0000000000000035DOI Listing

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