DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): High blood pressure is a major public
health problem that affects nearly 25 percent of adults in the United States
and contributes to increased risks of morbidity and mortality via
cardiovascular and renal diseases. Although anti-hypertensive medications are
often effective in the treatment of hypertension, non-pharmacological therapies
are recognized as important first-line or adjunctive treatments for blood
pressure management. A variety of relaxation and stress management techniques
have been tested for their potential contributions to blood pressure control
through stress reduction. Among these interventions, meditation training has
shown the greatest promise as an adjunctive behavioral treatment for lowering
blood pressure.
This project investigates the effectiveness of a meditation-training program
for the reduction of blood pressure. The 3-year study is a randomized,
controlled clinical trial involving 120 adult men and women with hypertension
or high-normal blood pressure recruited from the community. After extended
screening and baseline testing, participants will be assigned at random to
receive the experimental meditation training program (N= 60), to receive a
progressive muscle relaxation training program that serves as a placebo control
(N = 30), or to continue with usual care (N= 30). Post-treatment testing will
be conducted 1, 2, and 3 months after training begins. Treatment outcome will
be assessed by changes in laboratory-based and 24-hour ambulatory measures of
blood pressure from baseline to follow-up. In addition, the study will test
whether stress-reduction is a plausible mechanism that can account for clinical
outcomes, using measurements of treatment-related changes in neuroendocrine and
subjective measures of stress. Finally, the study will investigate the
characteristics of those who respond best to this treatment and determine
whether those individuals who begin training with higher levels of stress and
anxiety show greater improvements in blood pressure and measures of stress than
those who begin with lower levels.
Meditation training may be a cost-effective non-pharmacological treatment for
the management of high blood pressure. The results of this trial will advance
our understanding of the potential benefits of this behavioral intervention,
the mechanisms through which it works, and the kind of person who will benefit
most from it.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
alternative medicinebehavior therapybehavioral /social science research tagcardiovascular disorder therapyclinical trialshuman subjecthuman therapy evaluationhypertensionmeditationpatient oriented researchrelaxationstress management
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