Title | Exposure to Discrimination and Heart Rate Variability Reactivity to Acute Stress among Women with Diabetes. | ||
Author | Wagner, Julie; Lampert, Rachel; Tennen, Howard; Feinn, Richard | ||
Journal | Stress Health | Publication Year/Month | 2015-Aug |
PMID | 24194397 | PMCID | -N/A- |
Affiliation + expend | 1.MC3910 Division of Behavioral Sciences and Community Health, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT, USA. |
Exposure to racial discrimination has been linked to physiological reactivity. This study investigated self-reported exposure to racial discrimination and parasympathetic [high-frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV)] and sympathetic (norepinephrine and cortisol) activity at baseline and then again after acute laboratory stress. Lifetime exposure to racial discrimination was measured with the Schedule of Racist Events scale. Thirty-two women (16 Black and 16 White) with type 2 diabetes performed a public speaking stressor. Beat-to-beat intervals were recorded on electrocardiograph recorders, and HF-HRV was calculated using spectral analysis and natural log transformed. Norepinephrine and cortisol were measured in blood. Higher discrimination predicted lower stressor HF-HRV, even after controlling for baseline HF-HRV. When race, age, A1c and baseline systolic blood pressure were also controlled, racial discrimination remained a significant independent predictor of stressor HF-HRV. There was no association between lifetime discrimination and sympathetic markers. In conclusion, preliminary data suggest that among women with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), exposure to racial discrimination is adversely associated with parasympathetic, but not sympathetic, reactivity.