Faith Myles S, Matz Patty E, Jorge Marie A
Obesity Research Center, St Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, New York, NY 10025, USA.
J Psychosom Res. 2002 Oct;53(4):935-42. doi: 10.1016/s0022-3999(02)00308-2.
This article summarizes data on the relationship between obesity and depression in the population. Both obesity and depression are increasingly prevalent and associated with numerous health complications including hypertension, coronary heart disease, and increased mortality. There does not appear to be a simple or single association between these disorders. Meta-analytic studies suggest no statistically significant relationship, although pooling all subjects may mask important variables that moderate or mediate potential covariations. Sociodemographic, psychosocial, and genetic factors may render certain obese individuals more prone to depression or vice versa. Physiological and behavioral variables that link obesity and depression have received limited study. There are likely multiple obesity-depression covariations in the population, rather than a single pattern of association. There is a need for longitudinal and mechanistic studies to understand casual pathways and greater collaboration between depression and obesity specialists.
本文总结了关于人群中肥胖与抑郁关系的数据。肥胖和抑郁都日益普遍,且与包括高血压、冠心病及死亡率增加在内的众多健康并发症相关。这些病症之间似乎不存在简单或单一的关联。荟萃分析研究表明无统计学显著关系,尽管汇总所有受试者可能掩盖了调节或介导潜在协变量的重要变量。社会人口统计学、心理社会及遗传因素可能使某些肥胖个体更易患抑郁症,反之亦然。连接肥胖与抑郁的生理和行为变量研究有限。人群中可能存在多种肥胖 - 抑郁协变量,而非单一的关联模式。需要进行纵向和机制性研究以了解因果途径,并且抑郁症和肥胖症专家之间需要加强合作。