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Depression
May Not Cause Heart Problems
New research suggests that depression
does not cause heart attacks or related problems in patients with
heart disease.
Multiple studies have described
strong associations between depression and heart problems in people
with heart disease. However, lead author Dr. Ralph A. H. Stewart,
at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, and colleagues suggest
in their paper, published in a recent issue of the European Heart
Journal, that many of these studies only looked at the period
soon after a heart attack or other cardiac event.
Theorizing that depression is merely
a marker for increased risk attributable to other factors, Stewart's
group assessed depressive symptoms in 1130 individuals several
months after the cardiac event occurred.
At the start of the study, 22 percent
of subjects had depressive symptoms. During a follow-up period
of around eight years, there were 114 cardiac-related deaths,
108 nonfatal heart attacks, 53 nonfatal strokes, and 274 cases
of severe chest pain.
After accounting for the subject's
age, sex, and geographic location, the authors observed no association
between depressive symptoms and cardiac deaths. There was a modest
association with nonfatal heart events, the report indicates,
and a strong association between depressive symptoms and certain
heart symptoms.
After factoring in the effects
of heart disease risk factors, socioeconomic variables and symptoms
of heart disease, there was no evidence of an association between
depressive symptoms and prognosis, they report.
But even if depression doesn't
directly cause heart problems, depression in medically ill patients
should not be ignored, Dr. Jurgen Unutzer, a psychiatrist at the
University of Washington in Seattle, told Reuters Health.
In reviewing the report, Unutzer
noted that the team used a brief screening test to assess depressive
symptoms at one point in time. "It would be helpful to see if
the patients met the clinical diagnostic criteria for depression."
Unutzer agrees with the researchers'
assertion that large randomized clinical trials are needed to
further explore the link between depression and heart problems.
Regardless, treatment for depression
is important in and of itself, because depression causes "tremendous
decreases in quality of life and functional impairment in any
group of patients with chronic illness," he said. "Treating depression
makes a huge difference in quality of life and function."
SOURCE: European Heart Journal,
November 2003.
Reference
Source 89
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