Preview

Medical alphabet

Advanced search

Psychoemotional deadaptation and health problems as risk factors of decreasing learning at female students with idiopathic arterial hypotension

https://doi.org/10.33667/2078-5631-2021-17-51-54

Abstract

The aim of the work is to study the clinical and psychological manifestations of maladjustment of young female students with idiopathic arterial hypotension (IAH). Two groups, aged 18–35 years, were examined: 200 women with IAH with SBP level of 61–98 mm Hg, DBP – 59 mm Hg and less, and 130 women with normal blood pressure. The groups were compared by the frequency of complaints about health problems and the results of assessing mental performance, fatigue using the E. Kraepelin test. The studies were carried out as part of a preventive medical examination. A comparative analysis of complaints showed that women with IAH limit their physical activity due to a deterioration in subjective well-being – the appearance of shortness of breath, pain and discomfort in the chest and legs, dizziness, poor cold tolerance – chilliness of the hands and feet, episodes of involuntary urinary incontinence. With IAH, complaints of apathy, weakness and fatigue, and difficulty concentrating were more often recorded. Women with IAH under psychoemotional stress made more mistakes, and the proportion of women who made mistakes when performing a test was twice as high as in women with normal blood pressure. Thus, we can conclude that IAH in young women is characterized by more frequent complaints of health problems than in women with normal blood pressure, which is combined with a decrease in daily physical activity and cognitive impairment. IAH in female students can be regarded as a risk factor for psycho-emotional and social maladjustment, which negatively affects the effectiveness of learning in the higher education system.

About the Authors

V. M. Baev
Perm State Medical University n. a. E. A. Wagner
Russian Federation

Baev Valery M., DM Sci, professor, professor of Dept of Anesthesiology, Renimatology and Emergency Medicine.

Perm



O. A. Igumnova
Perm State Medical University n. a. E. A. Wagner
Russian Federation

Igumnova Oksana A., PhD Med, assistant of Dept of Faculty Therapy.

Perm



T. Yu. Agafonova
Perm State Medical University n. a. E. A. Wagner
Russian Federation

Agafonova Tatyana Yu., PhD Med, associate professor of Dept of Propedeutics of Internal Diseases No. 1.

Perm



References

1. Akhmatdinova M. R. Health as a multilevel education. Bulletin of the Bashkir State Medical University. 2018; 5: 10–14.

2. Maslow G.R., Haydon A., McRee A.L., Ford C. A., Halpern C. T. Growing up with a chronic illness: social success, educational/vocational distress. J Adolesc Health. 2011; 49 (2); 206–212. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2010.12.001.

3. Filipova A. G., Vysotskaya A. V. Children’s Health and Education in Russian Regions: from Clustering to Simulation. Regional problems. 2018; 21 (4): 107–116.

4. Meermanova I. B., Koigeldinova Sh.S., Ibraev S. A. The state of health of students enrolled in higher education. International Journal of Applied and Basic Research. 2017; 2: 193–197.

5. Chefranova Zh. Yu., Shapovalova S. L. Age-related psychological characteristics in persons with idiopathic arterial hypotension. Basic research. 2008; 10: 55–57.

6. Tonkin A. Low blood pressure and low energy: (how) are they related? J Hypertens. 2004; 22: 671–673. https://doi.org/10.1097/00004872–200404000–00002.

7. Baev V. M., Kudryavtseva E. N. Adaptation to physical load and the state of the autonomic nervous system in young women with low blood pressure. Pathological physiology and experimental therapy. 2015; 59 (4): 97–100. PMID: 27116886.

8. 2013 ESH/ESC Guidelines for the management of arterial hypertension. The Task Force for the management of arterial hypertension of the European Society of Hypertension (ESH) and of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC). European Heart Journal. 2013; 34: 2159–2219 https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/eht151.

9. Baev V. M., Agafonova T. Yu., Samsonova O. A., Kudryavtseva E. N. Idiopathic arterial hypotension in young women. Modern problems of diagnosis, clinic and treatment. Mauritius. Palmarium Academic Publishing. 2018.120 p. ISBN 978–620–2–38119–2.

10. Eliseev O. P. Workshop on personality psychology. SPb.: Publishing house. Peter, 2010; 507 p.

11. WHO Arterial hypertension. Technical Report Series.1978. No. 628. World Health Organisation, Genova.

12. Duschek S., Schandry R. Reduced brain perfusion and cognitive performance due to constitutional hypotension. Clinical Autonomic Research.. 2006; 17 (2): 69–v76 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10286–006–0379–7.

13. Wessely S., Nickson J., Cox B. Symptoms of low blood pressure: a population study. Brit Med J. 1990; 301: 362–365. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.301.6748.362.

14. Forte G., De Pascalis V., Favieri F., Casagrande M. Effects of Blood Pressure on Cognitive Performance: A Systematic Review. J. Clin. Med. 2020; 9: 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9010034.

15. Duschek S., Meinhardt J., Schandry R. Reduced cortical activity due to chronic low blood pressure: an EEG study. Biol Psychol. 2006; 72: 241–250. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsycho.2005.06.011.


Review

For citations:


Baev V.M., Igumnova O.A., Agafonova T.Yu. Psychoemotional deadaptation and health problems as risk factors of decreasing learning at female students with idiopathic arterial hypotension. Medical alphabet. 2021;(17):51-54. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.33667/2078-5631-2021-17-51-54

Views: 255


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2078-5631 (Print)
ISSN 2949-2807 (Online)