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Neurogenic Background for Emotional Stress-Associated Hypertension.

Marco Antônio Peliky FontesFernanda Ribeiro MarinsTapan A PatelCristiane Amorim de PaulaLiliane Ramos Dos Santos MachadoÉrick Bryan de Sousa LimaAna Caroline Ventris-GodoyAna Clara Rocha VianaIsadora Cristina Souza LinharesCarlos Henrique XavierJessica A FilosaKaushik P Patel
Published in: Current hypertension reports (2023)
The urban environment offers a variety of psychological stressors. Real or anticipatory, emotional stressors may increase baseline sympathetic activity. From routine day-to-day traffic stress to job-related anxiety, chronic or abnormal increases in sympathetic activity caused by emotional stressors can lead to cardiovascular events, including cardiac arrhythmias, increases in blood pressure and even sudden death. Among the various alterations proposed, chronic stress could modify neuroglial circuits or compromise antioxidant systems that may alter the responsiveness of neurons to stressful stimuli. These phenomena lead to increases in sympathetic activity, hypertension and consequent cardiovascular diseases. The link between anxiety, emotional stress, and hypertension may result from an altered neuronal firing rate in central pathways controlling sympathetic activity. The participation of neuroglial and oxidative mechanisms in altered neuronal function is primarily involved in enhanced sympathetic outflow. The significance of the insular cortex-dorsomedial hypothalamic pathway in the evolution of enhanced overall sympathetic outflow is discussed.
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