Watkins Lana L, Schneiderman Neil, Blumenthal James A, Sheps David S, Catellier Diane, Taylor C Barr, Freedland Kenneth E
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Am Heart J. 2003 Jul;146(1):48-54. doi: 10.1016/S0002-8703(03)00083-8.
Depression is common in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and is associated with adverse health outcomes. However, the extent to which clinical depression is related to comorbid medical conditions is unknown. This study examined the degree of association between clinical depression and medical comorbidity in patients hospitalized with AMI.
Two thousand four hundred and eighty-one depressed or socially isolated patients with AMI were enrolled, as part of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute-sponsored Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease clinical trial. A structured interview was used to diagnose major and minor depression and dysthymia; severity of depression was measured by the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression and the Beck Depression Inventory. Level of social support was measured by the ENRICHD Social Support Instrument. A modified version of the Charlson Comorbidity Index was used to measure the cumulative burden of medical comorbidity.
The adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for having major depression increased linearly with medical comorbidity (ORs 1.6, 2.2, 2.7 for each increasing medical comorbidity category). This relationship remained after adjusting for coronary heart disease severity (ORs 1.4, 1.7, 1.9, P <.001). The relationship between severity of depression and medical comorbidity was also maintained after excluding somatic symptoms of depression (F = 21.5, P <.0001).
Patients with AMI and clinical depression have significantly greater levels of medical comorbidity than nondepressed, socially isolated patients. Further research is needed to determine whether comorbid medical illness contributes to the more frequent rehospitalizations and increased risk of mortality associated with depression.
抑郁症在急性心肌梗死(AMI)患者中很常见,且与不良健康结局相关。然而,临床抑郁症与合并症之间的关联程度尚不清楚。本研究调查了AMI住院患者中临床抑郁症与合并症之间的关联程度。
作为美国国立心肺血液研究所资助的冠心病强化康复临床试验的一部分,招募了2481名患有抑郁症或社交孤立的AMI患者。采用结构化访谈来诊断重度和轻度抑郁症及心境恶劣;抑郁症严重程度通过汉密尔顿抑郁量表和贝克抑郁量表进行测量。社会支持水平通过ENRICHD社会支持量表进行测量。使用改良版的查尔森合并症指数来衡量合并症的累积负担。
患有重度抑郁症的校正比值比(OR)随合并症呈线性增加(每增加一个合并症类别,OR分别为1.6、2.2、2.7)。在调整冠心病严重程度后,这种关系仍然存在(OR分别为1.4、1.7、1.9,P<.001)。在排除抑郁症的躯体症状后,抑郁症严重程度与合并症之间的关系也得以维持(F=21.5,P<.0001)。
与无抑郁症的社交孤立患者相比,患有AMI和临床抑郁症的患者合并症水平显著更高。需要进一步研究以确定合并症是否导致与抑郁症相关的更频繁再住院和更高死亡风险。