Davidson K, Jonas B S, Dixon K E, Markovitz J H
Department of Psychology, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2000 May 22;160(10):1495-500. doi: 10.1001/archinte.160.10.1495.
Hypertension has been linked to several psychological factors, including depression, but the relation between hypertension incidence and depressive symptoms has not been adequately examined.
To determine if depressive symptoms independently predict hypertension incidence.
A prospective, multicenter, epidemiological cohort of young adults (aged 23-35 years at study entry) from the general community without hypertension followed up for 5 years.
A sample of 3343 adults from 4 urban areas stratified for race (black and white) from the CARDIA (Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults) study.
Hypertension incidence, which was defined as blood pressure higher than 160/95 mm Hg (assessed on a single occasion) or the use of prescribed antihypertensive medication.
Participants with high scores (> or = 16) on the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D) Scale were at significant risk for hypertension incidence compared with those with low CES-D scores (< or =7; odds ratio, 2.10; 95% confidence interval, 1.22-3.61) after adjustment for other hypertension risk factors (eg, age, resting systolic blood pressure at the 5-year examination, physical activity, daily alcohol use, parental history of hypertension, education, presence of diabetes mellitus or heart disease, sex, and race) in fixed logistic models. Those with intermediate depressive symptoms (CES-D scores 8-15) were also at significant risk (adjusted odds ratio, 1.78; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-2.98). These associations were significant in blacks alone but were not found in whites, who had a lower hypertension incidence (29 [2%] of 1806) than blacks (89 [6%] of 1537).
Depressive symptoms were predictive of later hypertension incidence in young adults, and young blacks with depressive symptoms were at high risk of developing hypertension.
高血压与多种心理因素有关,包括抑郁,但高血压发病率与抑郁症状之间的关系尚未得到充分研究。
确定抑郁症状是否能独立预测高血压发病率。
一项针对普通社区中无高血压的年轻成年人(研究开始时年龄为23 - 35岁)的前瞻性、多中心流行病学队列研究,随访5年。
从CARDIA(年轻成年人冠状动脉风险发展)研究中选取的来自4个城市地区、按种族(黑人和白人)分层的3343名成年人样本。
高血压发病率,定义为血压高于160/95 mmHg(单次测量)或使用处方抗高血压药物。
在固定逻辑模型中,调整其他高血压风险因素(如年龄、5年检查时的静息收缩压、身体活动、每日饮酒量、高血压家族史、教育程度、糖尿病或心脏病的存在、性别和种族)后,与流行病学研究中心抑郁量表(CES - D)得分低(≤7分)的参与者相比,得分高(≥16分)的参与者患高血压的风险显著增加(比值比,2.10;95%置信区间,1.22 - 3.61)。有中度抑郁症状(CES - D得分8 - 15分)的参与者也有显著风险(调整后比值比,1.78;95%置信区间,1.06 - 2.98)。这些关联仅在黑人中显著,而在白人中未发现,白人的高血压发病率(1806人中的29人[2%])低于黑人(1537人中的89人[6%])。
抑郁症状可预测年轻人后期的高血压发病率,有抑郁症状的年轻黑人患高血压的风险很高。