Physiological and behavioral correlates of anger dysregulation in adults were evaluated in the context of marital stress. Fifty-four married couples participated in a series of laboratory procedures that included electrocardiogram measures during a 15-min marital conflict interaction and an interview assessing their inability to regulate anger (anger dysregulation). Results from the multivariate regression analyses indicated that the nature of the couple's relationship, rather than individual levels of anger dysregulation, predicted lower parasympathetic cardiac activity (indexed by high-frequency heart period variability) and shorter cardiac interbeat intervals. Anger dysregulation, rather than the dyadic relationship, was predictive of greater displays of angry behavior during the marital conflict interaction. The importance of contextual factors in stress processes, such as stress due to marriage, are discussed in light of research linking poor marital quality to greater health risks for women than for men.
Keywordsanger dysregulation; marriage; heart period variability; cardiovascular reactivity; gender; marital stressThe leading cause of mortality for women is disease associated with the cardiovascular system (Kochanek, Murphey, Anderson, & Scott, 2004), yet owing to disparities in research on the biobehavioral stress processes that could lead to increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), we do not have as clear an understanding of what those processes may be for women as we do for men. This disparity is due, in part, to a previous CVD research paradigm that considered men the standard by which both women's and men's CVD processes could be understood (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1984). One area in which this disparity in knowledge is apparent is in our understanding of the association between anger dysregulation and cardiovascular response to emotionally salient stressors for women. The Address for correspondence: Sybil Carrère, Department of Family and Child Nursing, University of Washington; e-mail: carrere@u.washington.edu..
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NIH-PA Author ManuscriptNIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript goal of the current study was to evaluate gender differences in the association between anger dysregulation and cardiovascular responses to the emotional stress of marital conflict.Anger dysregulation refers to difficulties with regulating the intensity and frequency of angry emotions in stressful social situations (Brosschot & Thayer, 1998; Carrère et al., in press). 1 Brosschot and Thayer (1998) suggested that anger-dysregulated individuals have difficulty soothing their anger emotionally, physiologically, and behaviorally under stressful situations. Some prospective research found an association between anger dysregulation and increased risk for CVD (e.g., Barefoot, Larsen, Von der Lieth, & Schroll, 1995;Niaura et al., 2002), and a meta-analysis of this area of research concluded that anger dysregulation is an independent predictor of CVD (Miller, Smith, Tur...