Blood pressure hyperreactivity during stress is characteristic of borderline hypertension in white men. The present study evaluated the hemodynamic basis of this hyperreactivity and assessed its physiological basis in terms of sympathetic nervous system function. Cardiovascular adjustments to an aversive reaction time test were compared with those of the forehead cold pressor test, representing stressors that elicit active behavioral responses in contrast to passive tolerance of aversive stimulation. As anticipated, blood pressure increases were greater in 12 borderline hypertensive men compared with 21 age-matched normotensive men during the active reaction time stressor but not during the passive cold pressor test. The pressor hyperreactivity in borderline hypertensives was associated with excessive rises in plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine, leading to greater increases in cardiac output, despite evidence that the cardiac beta-adrenergic receptors in these subjects were downregulated compared with those of normotensive subjects. During the cold pressor test, borderline hypertension was associated with greater increases in systemic vascular resistance, which, in the presence of normal baroreceptor reflex function, led to an attenuation of cardiac output, thus producing no greater net effect on blood pressure than seen in normotensive subjects. Evidence of vascular hypertrophy in the borderline hypertensive subjects was considered to account for their vascular hyperreactivity to cold pressor stimulation. Collectively, the observations in this study further support the view that the early stages of hypertension in white men are characterized by sympathetic nervous system hyperreactivity, but only in association with tasks that elicit active behavioral coping responses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)