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Dive into the research topics where Mustafa al'Absi is active.

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Featured researches published by Mustafa al'Absi.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 1999

Cortisol fluctuates with increases and decreases in negative affect

Tony W Buchanan; Mustafa al'Absi; William R. Lovallo

Prior studies have reported cortisol secretion to be primarily influenced by negative affect, but less is known about cortisol activity during states of activation involving increased positive affect and decreased negative affect. On separate days, 30 healthy young men experienced: an activating and humorous video; a speech stressor; and a resting control period. Cortisol was measured in saliva before and after each 30-min mood induction. Positive affect (activation) was increased similarly by both the video and the speech compared to rest (p < .0001). Negative affect increased during the speech and decreased during the video (p < .001). Cortisol increased only during the speech (p < .0001). Following the video, however, cortisol was decreased significantly (p < .0001). Rest day cortisol revealed no differences across periods (p > .1). These results suggest that the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis is a dynamic system influenced by changes in negative affect irrespective of the experience of generalized activation.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 1993

Cortisol concentrations in serum of borderline hypertensive men exposed to a novel experimental setting

Mustafa al'Absi; William R. Lovallo

We tested the effect of repeated exposure to a novel experimental setting on resting, morning blood cortisol concentrations in borderline hypertensive men. Borderline hypertension is thought to be accompanied by increased central nervous system activation, which would predict enhanced anticipation and cortisol secretion in a novel experimental situation. Twenty-two borderline hypertensive and 23 normotensive male volunteers were tested in four sessions all separated by 2 or more days. Borderline hypertensives had higher cortisol concentrations than normotensives during the first and second days (p < .005) but not on the third and fourth days. Significant reductions in cortisol concentrations across days were noticed in borderline hypertensives but not in normotensives. All subjects reported feeling more activated on the first day than on any other day (p < .01). These results indicate that exposure to a novel experimental situation may enhance secretion of stress related hormones such as cortisol in borderline hypertensives.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1998

Interactive effects of trait hostility and anger expression on cardiovascular reactivity in young men

Stephen Bongard; Mustafa al'Absi; William R. Lovallo

Hostility and anger-expression style are personality traits often associated with elevated cardiovascular reactivity and potential heightened risk for cardiovascular disease. In the present study a sample of 50 young, healthy men were divided into groups low or high on the Cook-Medley Hostility scale and on anger-out from Spielbergers Anger Expression scale. Subjects worked on mental arithmetic and public speaking tasks in counterbalanced order. Heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure and hemodynamic indices were measured at baseline and during the tasks. Hostility and anger-out interacted in their effects on cardiovascular responses. The High Anger-Out/Low-Hostile group displayed the greatest increases in heart rate and blood pressures, while the High Anger-Out/High-Hostile group was least reactive. Furthermore, the High Anger-Out/Low-Hostile group showed a distinct fight/flight response pattern during public speaking, indicated by increases in stroke volume and cardiac output and a decrease in systemic vascular resistance. These results suggest that a mismatch between hostile cognitions and habitual anger expression leads to greater cardiovascular reactivity to challenging tasks, potentially enhancing risk for development of cardiovascular diseases.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1995

Hypertension risk factors and cardiovascular reactivity to mental stress in young men

Mustafa al'Absi; Susan A. Everson; William R. Lovallo

Hypertension risk may be associated with increased pressor response to mental stress. However, studies using family history as a predictor of reactivity have obtained mixed results. We assessed cardiovascular responses to mental arithmetic stress (a 5-min serial subtraction task) in male medical students (n = 220) at three levels of hypertension risk based on parental history and the subjects systolic blood pressure (SBP): low (SBP < 125 mm Hg and 0 or 1 hypertensive parent), moderate (resting SBP > or = 125 mm Hg or 2 hypertensive parents), or high (resting SBP > or = 125 mm Hg and 1 or 2 hypertensive parents). High risk men showed the greatest blood pressure responses (+22/+16 mm Hg), while moderate and low-risk groups showed correspondingly smaller responses (+17/+13 and +14/+11 mm Hg, ps < 0.02). Family history alone did not predict differential reactivity. This study replicates and extends our previous work suggesting the importance of using both family history and resting blood pressure level in determining future risk for hypertension in studies of cardiovascular reactivity in relation to hypertension risk in males.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1997

Men at risk for hypertension show elevated vascular resistance at rest and during mental stress

Abe F Marrero; Mustafa al'Absi; Gwendolyn A. Pincomb; William R. Lovallo

Men at risk for development of hypertension may show elevated blood pressure at rest and during work on mental stressors. We examined which component of blood pressure, vascular resistance or cardiac output, accounted for raised blood pressures seen in a high-risk, normotensive sample. Parental history of hypertension and resting systolic blood pressures were used to categorize subjects into high (n = 19) and low (n = 14) risk groups. Blood pressure, heart rate, cardiac output, stroke volume, and vascular resistance were measured during rest, mental arithmetic, and reaction time. Compared to low risk subjects, the high risk men had significantly higher blood pressures accompanied by higher vascular resistances at rest and during mental stress. The groups had negligible differences in heart rate, stroke volume, and cardiac output. This pattern of results implicates vascular resistance as the dominant element in altered blood pressure control in these young men at high risk for hypertension.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 1992

Matching Pain Coping Strategies to the Individual: A Prospective Validation of the Cognitive Coping Strategy Inventory

Paul D. Rokke; Mustafa al'Absi

The validity of the Cognitive Coping Strategy Inventory (CCSI; Butler et al., 1989) was tested in a prospective fashion. Subjects were randomly assigned to one of three conditions. Some were “matched” to a strategy for which they received a high CCSI score, some were “mismatched” to a strategy for which they received a low CCSI score, and some were given a choice of strategies. Those subjects using a matched strategy obtained better threshold and tolerance times on the cold pressor than subjects who used a mismatched strategy. Despite clear differences in exposure to the cold pressor these conditions did not differ from each other in self-reported levels of pain. It was concluded that the CCSI appears to be a valid and useful tool for selecting a coping strategy to help particular individuals manage acute pain. Though the CCSI is relatively easy to administer and score, the comparative costs and benefits of using it must be weighed against the somewhat more efficient approach of simply offering the subject a choice of treatments. Subjects given a choice of strategies performed as well as subjects matched to a strategy on the basis of CCSI scores.


Health Psychology | 1996

Caffeine and behavioral stress effects on blood pressure in borderline hypertensive Caucasian men.

William R. Lovallo; Mustafa al'Absi; Gwen A. Pincomb; Susan A. Everson; Bong Hee Sung; Richard B. Passey; Michael F. Wilson

Caffeine in dietary amounts raises blood pressure (BP), and its use increases during work stress; however, caffeine combined with behavioral stress has not been tested in borderline hypertensive (BH) men. Accordingly, this study tested a psychomotor stressor plus caffeine (3.3 mg/kg, equivalent to 2-3 cups of coffee) using a double-blind, crossover design in 24 BH men (140/90 mmHg < or = BP < or = 160/95 mmHg) and 24 controls (BP < or = 135/85 mmHg). BH men had modestly larger BP increases to the task and showed a greater combined effect of caffeine plus the task (+15/+11 mmHg) than controls (+10/+6 mmHg). BH men maintained response to the stressor in the face of an exaggerated BP response to caffeine, suggesting that use of caffeine during behavioral stress may elevate BP in BH individuals to a clinically meaningful degree.


Psychophysiology | 1998

Hemodynamics during rest and behavioral stress in normotensive men at high risk for hypertension

William R. Lovallo; Mustafa al'Absi

Persons at risk for hypertension may show elevated blood pressure (BP) at rest and during mental stress; however, the hemodynamics underlying the BP of those persons at high risk are not well characterized. We chose 21 high risk and 21 low risk men using their parental hypertension history and resting systolic blood pressures on two screenings. Then, on a day of extended rest versus a day with prolonged mental arithmetic and reaction time tasks, we examined whether high risk BP elevations reflected greater vascular resistance or cardiac output. High risk men had raised systolic/diastolic pressures (Fs = 74/15, ps < .0001/.0001) and higher vascular resistance (F = 6.6, p < .02) with minimal differences in heart rate and cardiac output. This finding implicates vascular resistance as the altered element in BP control in these high risk men tested in a familiar environment with minimal task-related threat.


Psychophysiology | 1997

Cardiovascular and neuroendocrine adjustment to public speaking and mental arithmetic stressors

Mustafa al'Absi; Stephan Bongard; Tony W Buchanan; Gwendolyn A. Pincomb; Julio Licinio; William R. Lovallo


Psychophysiology | 1996

Pain perception and cardiovascular responses in men with positive parental history for hypertension

Mustafa al'Absi; Tony W Buchanan; William R. Lovallo

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William R. Lovallo

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Tony W Buchanan

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Bong Hee Sung

State University of New York System

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Gwendolyn A. Pincomb

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Susan A. Everson

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Stephan Bongard

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Abe F Marrero

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Paul D. Rokke

North Dakota State University

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