PMID: 6536483Jan 1, 1984Paper

The relationship between psychological stress and insulin-dependent diabetic blood glucose control: preliminary investigations

Health Psychology : Official Journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association
D J CoxE Guthrow

Abstract

Clinical literature has frequently alluded to the role of psychological stress in diabetic blood glucose fluctuations. Past research in the area has been minimal and inconsistent. Recent methodological and measurement advances have made it possible to more accurately assess the impact of psychological stress on long-term diabetic control. Study 1 of this report found a significant positive correlation between the Hassles Scale and Hemoglobin A1 levels in a group of 59 adult insulin-dependent diabetic patients. Social Supports, Type A behavior, and reported therapeutic compliance neither correlated with hemoglobin A1 nor influenced the Hassles-Hemoglobin A1 relationship. In a separate sample of 123 subjects, Study II revealed that diabetic patients generally perceive stress as a very potent factor in blood glucose control, but that different stressors may have differential effects for different diabetic patients. A factor analysis of these data reveals three different stress dimensions of the perceived stress-blood glucose relationship: fight/flight, passive/ruminative, and positive affect.

Citations

Jan 1, 1987·Journal of Chronic Diseases·R E GlasgowL C Schafer
Jan 1, 1990·Journal of Psychosomatic Research·S J NiemcrykH E Gary
Jan 1, 1986·Social Science & Medicine·M WeinbergerW M Tierney
Feb 5, 2014·Journal of Psychiatric Research·Dominique L MusselmanPhilip D Harvey
Nov 9, 2000·Journal of Psychosomatic Research·A J WeardenR Davies
Aug 1, 1996·Psychoneuroendocrinology·A DutourC Oliver
Sep 1, 1998·European Psychiatry : the Journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists·S FriedmanM C Mouren-Simeoni
May 1, 1996·Archives of Disease in Childhood·R VinerP Trudinger
Mar 27, 2001·Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association·B RiceR M Dixon

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Autoimmune Diabetes & Tolerance

Patients with type I diabetes lack insulin-producing beta cells due to the loss of immunological tolerance and autoimmune disease. Discover the latest research on targeting tolerance to prevent diabetes.