The relationship between norepinephrine and stress caused by life changes was assessed using urinary norepinephrine levels and responses to a 57-item stress questionnaire interview obtained from 21 post-myocardial infarction and 27 healthy control male and female subjects. High correlations between norepinephrine and duration of present stress and duration and severity of life changes, and moderate correlations between norepinephrine and anxiety and depression were found among the post-infarction group. No significant correlations were found in the control group. Post-infarction subjects with elevated norepinephrine had significantly higher scores on duration of present stress and duration and severity of life changes than did post-infarction subjects with normal norepinephrine levels. Control subjects with normal and elevated norepinephrine did not differ significantly on any of the comparison variables. Standard risk factors failed to add significantly to the prediction of norepinephrine in either group. However, 68.3 percent of the variance in norepinephrine was accounted for by a single predictor, the duration of present stress.
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