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Handbook of Research Methods in Cardiovascular Behavioral Medicine Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1989 [Minkštas viršelis]

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Cardiovascular disease continues to be the number ioral medicine" was developed and shaped into the one source of morbidity and mortality in our coun­ following definition: try. Despite a 35% reduction since 1964, these Behavioral medicine is the interdisciplinary field con­ diseases, particularly coronary heart disease cerned with the development and integration of behav­ (CHD), claim nearly 1,000,000 lives each year in ioral and biomedical science knowledge and techniques the United States (Havlik & Feinleib, 1979). relevant to the understanding of health and illness and The Framingham study, among others, has iden­ the application of this knowledge and these techniques to prevention, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation. tified three major risk factors implicated in the de­ (Schwartz & Weiss, 1978) velopment of CHD: smoking, elevated serum cho­ lesterol, and high blood pressure (Castelli et at., This concept of "biobehavioral" collaboration 1986). Given that these factors account for less challenged scientists and clinicians of many disci­ than 50% of the variance associated with CHD plines to consider how they might more effectively (Jenkins, 1976), it has become obvious that addi­ develop diagnostic, treatment, and prevention tional risk factors must be identified if further pro­ strategies by merging their perspectives to address gress is to be made in disease prevention and simultaneously, among others, behavioral, psy­ control.

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Springer Book Archives
I. Cardiovascular Measurement in the Laboratory.- 1 Structure and
Function of the Cardiovascular System.- 2 Noninvasive Measurement of Cardiac
Functions.- 3 The Experimental Study of Behaviorally Induced Arrhythmias.- 4
The Measurement of Blood Pressure.- 5 Measurement of Blood Flow and Venous
Distensibility.- 6 Autonomic Function Testing.- 7 Microneurographic
Measurement of Sympathetic Nerve Activity in Humans.- 8 Measurement of Volume
Regulation: Renal Function.- II. Measurement Issues in
Physiology-Biochemistry.- 9 Electrolytes.- 10 Methods for Study of
Carbohydrate Metabolism.- 11 Catecholamine Measurement in Behavioral
Research.- 12 Adrenocortical and Gonadal Steroids in Behavioral
Cardiovascular Medicine.- 13 Measurement and Function of Neuropeptides: Focus
on Corticotropin-Releasing Factor and Arginine Vasopressin.- 14 Receptors.-
15 The ReninAngiotensinAldosterone System and Atrial Natriuretic Factor.-
III. Ambulatory Monitoring.- 16 Ambulatory Monitoring: Applications and
Limitations.- 17 Ambulatory Electrocardiographic Monitoring: Methods and
Applications.- 18 Research Techniques for Ambulatory Blood Pressure
Monitoring.- 19 Methods for Ambulatory Monitoring of Blood and Urine.- 20
Diaries in Ambulatory Monitoring.- 21 Data Analysis of Ambulatory Blood
Pressure Readings: Before p Values.- IV. Laboratory Tasks, Procedures, and
Nonpsychometric Subject Variables.- 22 Psychophysiologic Strategies in
Laboratory Research.- 23 Psychophysiologic Reactivity as a Dimension of
Individual Differences.- 24 The Social Context of Stress and Behavioral
Medicine Research: Instructions, Experimenter Effects, and Social
Interactions.- 25 Physical Stressors and Pharmacologic Manipulations:
Neurohumoral and Hemodynamic Responses in Hypertension.- 26 Hemodynamic
Assessmentand Pharmacologic Probes as Tools to Analyze Cardiovascular
Reactivity.- 27 Constitutional Factors Relating to Differences in
Cardiovascular Response.- 28 Ethnic Differences in Resting and Stress-Induced
Cardiovascular and Humoral Activity: An Overview.- 29 Cardiovascular and
Neuroendocrine Responses to Challenge in Males and Females.- V. Psychometric
Assessment.- 30 An Overview of Issues in Psychometric Assessment.- 31
Personality Dimensions in Reactivity and Cardiovascular Disease.- 32 Stress
and Social Support: Assessment Issues.- 33 Assessing Subjects Construal of
the Laboratory Situation.- 34 Observational Methods for Assessing
Psychological State.- 35 Definition and Assessment of Coronary-Prone
Behavior.- VI. Research Designs and Statistical Concerns.- 36 Research
Designs in Behavioral Cardiovascular Research.- 37 The Analysis of Continuous
Data.- 38 Power Calculations for Statistical Design.- 39 Experimental Studies
in the Field: Some Pragmatic Considerations.- 40 Metaanalysis of Related
Research.- 41 Pooling of Data from Independent Studies.- 42 Clinical Trials.