Stress, Psychological Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Beta-Blockers, Aspirin, and Natural Habituation on Procoagulant Activity, Expression of Cellular Adhesion Molecules, and Endothelial Activation in Response to Acute Mental Stress: a Randomized Controlled Trial.
This randomized double-blinded controlled trial uses a factorial design to investigate whether application of beta-blockers (inderal 80 mg) or aspirin (100 mg) or a combination thereof has an effect on the activation of the hemostatic system, the platelets and the endothelium in response to acute mental stress. Specifically we test the hypothesis that inderal attenuates the activation of the hemostatic system as compared to placebo. The second hypothesis is that aspirin attenuates the activation of platelets as compared to placebo. Subjects will be randomly allocated to either of the four following study arms: placebo - inderal - aspirin - inderal plus aspirin. Subjects will receive the study medication for five days prior to the mental stress. The acute mental stress consists of a public speaking session of 10 min duration immediately followed by a mental arithmetic test of 5 min duration. Blood will be collected prior to the stress, immediately thereafter, at 45 min at at 1 hour and 45 min.
Background: Population based studies have established hemostatic abnormalities as
independent risk factors for atherosclerosis and related adverse outcomes. These
abnormalities are characterized as prothrombotic by elevated plasma levels of e.g.
fibrinogen or D-dimer. Prothrombotic states appear to aggravate the impact of other risk
factors, e.g. hypertension. Other epidemiologic studies have shown a sizable association
between chronic mental stress (e. g. marital discord in women) or acute mental stress
(anger) and coronary heart disease. A large case-crossover study attributed a 2.3-fold
increased relative risk of acute myocardial infarction during the 2 hours following
outbursts of anger. This risk was modified by aspirin (risk ratio of 2.9 in non-users,
risk-ratio of 1.4 with prior to aspirin intake). We have recently shown that acute mental
stress is followed by profound rises of D-dimer and induction of a prothrombotic state. In
real life, individuals are frequently and repetitively exposed to similar stressors (e.g.
work or marital discord). Those who fail to habituate and to mitigate their adrenergic
responses and hemostatic changes, may be at increased risk of rapid progression of
atherosclerosis. These individuals might particularly benefit from preventive medication
with beta-blockers or aspirin.
Objectives: To elucidate whether administration of non-specific beta-blockers, aspirin or
both may abrogate the prothrombotic shift in the hemostatic balance in response to acute
mental stress.
To elucidate the pathway leading from central nervous system arousal after acute mental
stress to increases in plasma D-dimer levels by investigating intermediate steps in the
process, including activation of mononuclear and endothelial cells, of platelets, and of
hemostatic factors.
To show that some individuals do not habituate when repetitively being exposed to the same
stressor or/and that habituation blunts the stress response as do beta-blocking medication,
aspirin or both.
Subjects: 80 healthy male and nonpregnant female non-smokers aged 40 - 55 years.
Methods: Randomized, double-blind, two-by-two factorial design. A public speaking stress
will be applied in two different experiments. 1) The first experiment consists of a
habituation study wherein 20 subjects will be stressed three times with intervals of 1 week
apart. 2) The second experiment consists of a medication study wherein 60 individuals (other
than those taking part in the habituation study) will be randomly assigned to one of the
following four arms: 1) placebo/placebo, 2) placebo/beta-blocker, 3) placebo/aspirin, 4)
beta-blocker/aspirin. Beta-blocker medication consists of 80 mg/day of propranolol (Inderal
LA 80), aspirin will be given in a dose of 100 mg/day. Blood will be collected before,
immediately after, and at 45 min, and at 1 hour and 45 min after the stress task in both
experiments. In both experiments, subjects will be fully debriefed after the first stressor.
The primary dependent variable is the change score of plasma levels of D-dimer after the
stressor. Data will be analyzed by two-way ANOVA with the experimental condition being the
first factor and with the experiment repetition being the second factor. Intermediate
variables measured for elucidating the biological pathway leading to changes in D-dimer are:
a) arousal of neuro-endocrine circuits: plasma levels of epinephrine and nor-epinephrine,
salivary cortisol levels; b) activation / alteration of circulating mononuclear cells:
quantitative determination of subpopulations by flow-cytometry, expression of L-selectin
(CD62L), lymphocyte function associated antigen 1 (LFA-1), CD154 (expressed on activated
T-lymphocytes), and tissue-factor on monocytes; c) activation of endothelial cells: plasma
levels of soluble intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (sICAM-1), soluble vascular cellular
adhesion molecule 1 (sVCAM-1), endothelin-1, and von Willebrand factor (vWF); d) balance
between prothrombotic and fibrinolytic activity: plasma levels of D-dimer, fibrinogen,
thrombin/antithrombin III complexes, tissue plasminogen activator, and plasminogen activator
inhibitor-1.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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