Correlations between psychological and physiological responses to acute flight phobia stress

Abstract
Exposure of phobic subjects to real-life psychological stress may induce a high level of anxiety and be better than laboratory experiments for studies of physiological responses to psychological stress in human research. Therefore, by introducing natural psychological stress, i.e. actual flying in subjects with flight phobia (n=23), the present study aimed at testing the hypothesis that there is, during mental stress, a direct relationship between the level of anxiety and the responses in the physiological variables blood pressure, heart rate and plasma catecholamines. Plasma adrenaline, heart rate, blood pressure and perceived anxiety measured by three different scales increased highly significantly during flight whereas plasma noradrenaline did not change. No direct relationship was found between the physiological and psychological variables. Thus, the physiological responses to natural psychological stress in terms of phobic anxiety may be definite, but the way the responses are related is less clear.