Loneliness linked to high
blood pressure in aging adults
Newswise — Loneliness is a major
risk factor in increasing blood pressure in older Americans, and
could increase the risk of death from stroke and heart disease, new
research at the University of Chicago shows.
Scholars found that lonely people
have blood pressure readings that are as much as 30 points higher
than in non-lonely people, even when other factors such as
depressive symptoms or perceived stress are taken into account, said
Louise Hawkley, Senior Research Scientist with the Center for
Cognitive and Social Neuroscience at the University of Chicago, and
John Cacioppo, the Tiffany & Margaret Blake Distinguished Service
Professor in Psychology. This is equivalent to the difference
between a normal blood pressure of 120 and a level of 150 which
signifies Stage 1 hypertension. Blood pressure differences between
lonely and non-lonely people were smallest at age 50 and greatest
among the oldest adults tested, those at retirement age.
Hawkley and Cacioppo are authors
of the paper, “Loneliness is a Unique Predictor of Age-Related
Differences in Systolic Blood Pressure,” published in the journal
Psychology and Aging. Other co-authors were Christopher Masi,
Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Chicago, and
Jarett Berry of the Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern.
The increase in blood pressure
associated with loneliness is about the same magnitude as reductions
attained through weight loss and regular physical activity in people
suffering from hypertension. “By these standards, improvements in a
sense of social connectedness may have clinical benefits comparable
to lifestyle modifications,” the authors wrote.
The team based their research on a
study of 229 people aged 50 to 68. The randomly chosen group
includes whites, African Americans and Latinos who are part of a
long-term study on aging. Members of the group were asked a series
of questions to determine if they perceived themselves as lonely.
They were asked to rate their connections with others through a
series of topics, such as “I have a lot in common with the people
around me,” “My social relationships are supeficial,” and “I can
find companionship when I want it.”
The research team also examined
data on weight, alcohol consumption, smoking, blood pressure
medications, and demographic characteristics and found that people
who rated high on being lonely had a significantly higher blood
pressure than non-lonely people with similar profiles on the other
measures.
The research also showed that the
normal increases in blood pressure associated with aging are
augmented by loneliness.
The paper builds on Cacioppo’s
earlier research that demonstrated that the loneliness is related to
increased peripheral vascular resistance among young people.
Although both lonely and non-lonely people in that study experienced
stress, subjects in both studies reacted to stress differently.
“Lonely people differ from
non-lonely individuals in their tendency to perceive stressful
circumstances as threatening rather than challenging, and to
passively cope with stress by failing to solicit instrumental and
emotional support and by withdrawing from stress rather than by
actively coping and attempting to problem solve,” Cacioppo said.
The study on young people showed
that stress caused an increase in resistance to blood flow brought
on by their response to stress. Greater resistance to blood flow in
lonley people compared to non-lonely idnvidiauls could increase
blood pressure over the lifetime of lonely people, Cacioppo said.
Longitudinal studies are underway to look at how loneliness, now
associated with an increase in blood pressure, may play a causal
role in the increase, he said.
“I’m surprised by the magnitude of
the relationship between loneliness and hypertension in this
well-controlled cross-sectional study,” said Richard Suzman, Ph.D.,
director of the Behavioral and Social Research Program at the
National Institute on Aging (NIA), a funder of the research “Older
people’s relationships are often disrupted by death, illness and
geographic mobility. One of NIA’s goals is to help determine what
can be done to improve the quality of relationships and social
connectedness as a way to ease loneliness and reduce blood
pressure.”
The Templeton Foundation also
funded the research.