ALLOSTATIC LOAD INFLUENCES VASCULAR FUNCTION AND SYMPATHOLYSIS IN YOUNG BLACK ADULTS

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Date

2024

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Abstract

In the U.S., Black individuals tend to face a disproportionately higher risk for hypertension. This is largely attributed to chronic sympathetic activation induced by heightened exposure to psychosocial stressors. Allostatic load (AL), an index of cumulative physiological dysfunction from chronic stress, is associated with hypertensive risk and is also heightened in Black adults compared to those of other racial groups. Indeed, increased sympathetic activity is a hallmark characteristic of both hypertension and AL. The inability to blunt sympathetic-induced vasoconstriction during exercise (impaired functional sympatholysis) is also associated with hypertension. This dissertation aimed to investigate whether AL was associated with measures of vascular health in young Black adults, both at rest and during a sympathetic stressor. In our first study, we examined associations between AL and indices of vascular function and structure among young Black adults at rest, finding that higher AL was associated with greater macrovascular dysfunction and amplified wave-reflections. Additionally, we identified significant correlations among greater self-perceived stress with smaller brachial artery diameters and greater wave-reflections. The second aim of this dissertation focused on the associations between AL and the magnitude of functional sympatholysis among this population. Results indicated a positive association between AL and functional sympatholysis, with amplified sympatholytic responses among young Black females, as compared to their male counterparts, when forearm volume was controlled for. Overall, our findings suggest that elevated AL might predict macrovascular dysfunction at rest, with larger arterial diameters potentially compensating for chronic stress. These adaptive mechanisms, commonly observed in aging and diseased states, may also explain the positive correlations between AL and the functional sympatholytic response in young Black adults. Our consistent observations of the redundant vascular mechanisms among young Black adults allowing for adaptation to chronic stress strengthen our findings and further highlight the complex interplay between stress and cardiovascular health in Black adults.

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