The appraisal of chronic stress and the development of the metabolic syndrome: a systematic review of prospective cohort studies

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The appraisal of chronic stress and the development of the metabolic syndrome : a systematic review of prospective cohort studies. / Bergmann, N; Gyntelberg, F; Faber, J.

In: Endocrine Connections, Vol. 3, No. 2, 06.2014, p. R55-R80.

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Bergmann, N, Gyntelberg, F & Faber, J 2014, 'The appraisal of chronic stress and the development of the metabolic syndrome: a systematic review of prospective cohort studies', Endocrine Connections, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. R55-R80. https://doi.org/10.1530/EC-14-0031

APA

Bergmann, N., Gyntelberg, F., & Faber, J. (2014). The appraisal of chronic stress and the development of the metabolic syndrome: a systematic review of prospective cohort studies. Endocrine Connections, 3(2), R55-R80. https://doi.org/10.1530/EC-14-0031

Vancouver

Bergmann N, Gyntelberg F, Faber J. The appraisal of chronic stress and the development of the metabolic syndrome: a systematic review of prospective cohort studies. Endocrine Connections. 2014 Jun;3(2):R55-R80. https://doi.org/10.1530/EC-14-0031

Author

Bergmann, N ; Gyntelberg, F ; Faber, J. / The appraisal of chronic stress and the development of the metabolic syndrome : a systematic review of prospective cohort studies. In: Endocrine Connections. 2014 ; Vol. 3, No. 2. pp. R55-R80.

Bibtex

@article{e96ba3f1be8c4fab8eb53dc8084f1b9d,
title = "The appraisal of chronic stress and the development of the metabolic syndrome: a systematic review of prospective cohort studies",
abstract = "Chronic psychosocial stress has been proposed as a risk factor for the development of the metabolic syndrome (MES). This review gives a systematic overview of prospective cohort studies investigating chronic psychosocial stress as a risk factor for incident MES and the individual elements of MES. Thirty-nine studies were included. An association between chronic psychosocial stress and the development of MES was generally supported. Regarding the four elements of MES: i) weight gain: the prospective studies supported etiological roles for relationship stress, perceived stress, and distress, while the studies on work-related stress (WS) showed conflicting results; ii) dyslipidemi: too few studies on psychosocial stress as a risk factor for dyslipidemia were available to draw a conclusion; however, a trend toward a positive association was present; iii) type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2): prospective studies supported perceived stress and distress as risk factors for the development of DM2 among men, but not among women, while WS was generally not supported as a risk factor among neither men nor women; iv) hypertension: marital stress and perceived stress might have an influence on blood pressure (BP), while no association was found regarding distress. Evaluating WS the results were equivocal and indicated that different types of WS affected the BP differently between men and women. In conclusion, a longitudinal association between chronic psychosocial stress and the development of MES seems present. However, the number of studies with sufficient quality is limited and the design of the studies is substantially heterogeneous.",
author = "N Bergmann and F Gyntelberg and J Faber",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2014 The authors.",
year = "2014",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1530/EC-14-0031",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "R55--R80",
journal = "Endocrine Connections",
issn = "2049-3614",
publisher = "BioScientifica Ltd.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The appraisal of chronic stress and the development of the metabolic syndrome

T2 - a systematic review of prospective cohort studies

AU - Bergmann, N

AU - Gyntelberg, F

AU - Faber, J

N1 - © 2014 The authors.

PY - 2014/6

Y1 - 2014/6

N2 - Chronic psychosocial stress has been proposed as a risk factor for the development of the metabolic syndrome (MES). This review gives a systematic overview of prospective cohort studies investigating chronic psychosocial stress as a risk factor for incident MES and the individual elements of MES. Thirty-nine studies were included. An association between chronic psychosocial stress and the development of MES was generally supported. Regarding the four elements of MES: i) weight gain: the prospective studies supported etiological roles for relationship stress, perceived stress, and distress, while the studies on work-related stress (WS) showed conflicting results; ii) dyslipidemi: too few studies on psychosocial stress as a risk factor for dyslipidemia were available to draw a conclusion; however, a trend toward a positive association was present; iii) type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2): prospective studies supported perceived stress and distress as risk factors for the development of DM2 among men, but not among women, while WS was generally not supported as a risk factor among neither men nor women; iv) hypertension: marital stress and perceived stress might have an influence on blood pressure (BP), while no association was found regarding distress. Evaluating WS the results were equivocal and indicated that different types of WS affected the BP differently between men and women. In conclusion, a longitudinal association between chronic psychosocial stress and the development of MES seems present. However, the number of studies with sufficient quality is limited and the design of the studies is substantially heterogeneous.

AB - Chronic psychosocial stress has been proposed as a risk factor for the development of the metabolic syndrome (MES). This review gives a systematic overview of prospective cohort studies investigating chronic psychosocial stress as a risk factor for incident MES and the individual elements of MES. Thirty-nine studies were included. An association between chronic psychosocial stress and the development of MES was generally supported. Regarding the four elements of MES: i) weight gain: the prospective studies supported etiological roles for relationship stress, perceived stress, and distress, while the studies on work-related stress (WS) showed conflicting results; ii) dyslipidemi: too few studies on psychosocial stress as a risk factor for dyslipidemia were available to draw a conclusion; however, a trend toward a positive association was present; iii) type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2): prospective studies supported perceived stress and distress as risk factors for the development of DM2 among men, but not among women, while WS was generally not supported as a risk factor among neither men nor women; iv) hypertension: marital stress and perceived stress might have an influence on blood pressure (BP), while no association was found regarding distress. Evaluating WS the results were equivocal and indicated that different types of WS affected the BP differently between men and women. In conclusion, a longitudinal association between chronic psychosocial stress and the development of MES seems present. However, the number of studies with sufficient quality is limited and the design of the studies is substantially heterogeneous.

U2 - 10.1530/EC-14-0031

DO - 10.1530/EC-14-0031

M3 - Review

C2 - 24743684

VL - 3

SP - R55-R80

JO - Endocrine Connections

JF - Endocrine Connections

SN - 2049-3614

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 138497427