| Pet Dog Reduces Stress of Caring for Brain-Injured | |
BUFFALO, N.Y. October 20, 2000 -- The latest findings on the ability of pet dogs
to reduce cardiovascular stress in persons living high-stress lives -- in this
case those caring for brain-injured spouses -- shows that dog owners experienced
one-fifth the rise in blood pressure during stressful, care-giving activities
compared to those without dogs.
Moreover, when participants without dogs acquired them six months into the
study, their average blood pressure and heart rate during stress-producing
situations dropped to match that of the initial group.
Karen Allen, Ph.D., research scientist in the University at Buffalo's Division
of Clinical Pharmacology in the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences,
conducted this and several earlier studies on the effects of owning a pet dog on
cardiovascular reactivity. She presented results of her current research today
(Oct. 19) at the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research
in San Diego.
"This study shows how the presence of a pet dog can diminish stress
responses to real-life daily stress over which caregivers have no control,"
Allen stated. "It demonstrates a therapeutic role for pet dogs, especially
for individuals with hypertension who live under conditions of great
responsibility and stress."
Allen conducted the study over one year. It involved 60 volunteers, equally
divided between men and women, who were assigned randomly to either an
experimental or control group. All were caring for spouses with traumatic brain
injury and were taking ACE inhibitors to control hypertension. ACE inhibitors
have been shown to control blood pressure during normal daily activities, Allen
noted, but not to be effective in holding down pressure during stressful
situations. All participants also had to be willing to acquire a dog.
At the beginning of the study, all participants wore blood-pressure monitors for
48 hours and kept diaries of their activities. Data on blood pressure and heart
rate were captured during the first day when participants were caring for their
spouses. These data were labeled natural stressors. On the second day,
cardiovascular readings were taken while participants performed two activities
used by researchers to simulate stressful situations - giving a speech, in this
case on the problems of caring for a disabled spouse, and immersing one hand in
ice water for two minutes (cold pressor test).
The experimental group then adopted dogs, and cardiovascular readings were taken
from all participants again at six months under the same conditions. At this
point, the control group also adopted dogs, and readings were repeated once
again after six months.
Results showed that before dogs entered the picture, all participants reacted
similarly to natural and simulated stressful situations. "Interestingly,
although the speech and cold pressor tasks elicited large increases in blood
pressure and heart rate, natural spouse interaction produced even greater
increases," Allen said. "Before pets, the speech task raised systolic
blood pressure by 28 mmHg (millimeters of mercury), but spouse interaction
raised systolic blood pressure by 52 mmHg."
After six months, those with dogs showed only a small rise in blood pressure
when caring for their spouses, while blood pressure in the control group rose
nearly 40 mmHg on average. After 12 months, when all participants had dogs, once
again there was little difference between the groups, results showed.
"The findings of this study show that pets can help lower responses to
everyday stress, even among individuals who take medication for their high blood
pressure," Allen said. "Although medication reduces resting blood
pressure, it appears a beloved pet influences how we react to stressful people
and situations that we cannot change."
This research was supported by the Waltham Centre for Pet Nutrition in England.
---University of Buffalo
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