焦虑
血压
反应性(心理学)
心率
萧条(经济学)
心理学
内科学
医学
临床心理学
精神科
宏观经济学
病理
经济
替代医学
作者
Lei Zhu,Weichun Lin,Jingjing Huang,Zhengyu Cao,Maoxiong Wu,Zhiteng Chen,Wengen Zhu,Ziqi Tan,Peng Yu,Jianyong Ma,Yangxin Chen,Yuling Zhang,Jingfeng Wang
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2023.02.150
摘要
There is now an increasing appreciation of how psychological health can contribute to cardiovascular disease, called the mind-heart connection. A blunted cardiovascular reactivity to depression and anxiety may be responsible for the potential mechanism, however, with inconsistent results. Anti-psychological drugs have an effect on the cardiovascular system and, thus, may disturb their relationship. However, in treatment-naive individuals with psychological symptoms, no research has specifically evaluated the relationship between psychological state and cardiovascular reactivity. We included 883 treatment-naive individuals who came from a longitudinal cohort study of Midlife in the United States. Symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress were assessed by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), Spielberger Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), the Liebowitz Social Anxiety scale (LSAS) and the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), respectively. Cardiovascular reactivity was measured using standardized, laboratory-based stressful tasks. Treatment-naive individuals with depressive symptoms (CES-D ≥ 16), anxiety symptoms (STAI ≥ 54), and higher stress levels (PSS ≥ 27) had lower cardiovascular reactivity as assessed by systolic blood pressure (SBP) reactivity, diastolic blood pressure (DBP) reactivity and heart rate (HR) reactivity (P < 0.05). Pearson analyses showed that psychological symptoms were correlated with lower SBP reactivity, DBP reactivity, and heart rate reactivity (P < 0.05). Multivariate linear regression showed that depression and anxiety were negatively related to lower cardiovascular reactivity (SBP, DBP and HR reactivity) after full adjustments (P < 0.05). Stress was associated with reduced SBP and DBP reactivity but with a nonsignificant association with HR reactivity (P = 0.056). Depression, anxiety, and stress symptoms are associated with blunted cardiovascular reactivity in treatment-naive adult Americans. These findings suggest that blunted cardiovascular reactivity is an underlying mechanism linking psychological health and cardiovascular diseases.
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