Stability of individual differences in cardiovascular reactivity: A thirteen month follow-up

Abstract
This study concerns the stability of individual differences in cardiovascular reactivity among nineteen male subjects who had participated in a similar investigation thirteen months earlier. In the previous study (Year I), subjects were presented a frustrating task in concept formation to perform at each of two experimental sessions, scheduled one week apart, and recordings of heart rate (HR) and systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP) obtained during periods of rest and task performance on each occasion of testing. Under the current procedure (Year II), subjects were exposed to the same experimental stressor as on year I, as well as a second cognitive task involving a difficult problem in “mental arithmetic”; HR, SBP and DBP were again recorded both at rest and while subjects performed the instructed tasks. Measures of task-related cardiovascular arousal across the two years of observation revealed reproducible individual differences with respect to the magnitude of subjects' HR and SBP, but not DBP, reactivity. Although individual differences in HR and SBP responses correlated positively, neither HR nor SBP reactivity covaried reliably with DBP changes. It was suggested that concomitant response differences in HR and SBP, as observed under these experimental conditions, may reflect an underlying dimension of individual differences in beta-adrenergic reactivity.