Rutledge Thomas, Reis Steven E, Olson Marian, Owens Jane, Kelsey Sheryl F, Pepine Carl J, Mankad Sunil, Rogers William J, Bairey Merz C Noel, Sopko George, Cornell Carol E, Sharaf Barry, Matthews Karen A
University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California, USA.
Psychosom Med. 2004 Nov-Dec;66(6):882-8. doi: 10.1097/01.psy.0000145819.94041.52.
To examine the association between social relationships measured by the Social Network Scale and coronary artery disease (CAD) risk and mortality among a sample of women with suspected CAD.
Five hundred three women (mean age, 59 years) with suspected CAD warranting clinical investigation completed a diagnostic protocol including psychosocial testing, CAD risk factor assessment, and quantitative coronary angiography. Patients were subsequently followed for a mean of 2.3 years to track all-cause mortality.
Women reporting higher social network scores showed a consistent pattern of reduced coronary artery disease risk, including lower blood glucose levels (r = -0.11; p = .03), lower smoking rates (odds ratio [OR] = 0.81; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.71-0.93; p = .002), lower waist-hip ratios (r = -0.18; p < .01), and lower rates of hypertension (OR = 0.90; 95% CI = 0.81-0.99; p = .04) and diabetes (OR = 0.83; 95% CI = 0.73-0.94; p = .004). Based on quantitative angiogram findings, high social network scorers also had less severe CAD (mean angiogram stenosis value, 40.8 vs. 27.2 for low and high scoring social network groups, respectively; p < .001). Finally, mortality rates over follow-up showed a dose-response pattern in relation to quartile scorers on the Social Network Index, with low scorers showing more than twice the death rate of high scorers (relative risk = 2.4; p = .03).
Among a cohort of women with suspected CAD, smaller social circles were associated with increased CAD risk factors and mortality, an effect that appeared to be explained largely by income level. The findings extend previous studies of social network effects on health by highlighting risk among women with suspected CAD, and suggest mechanisms for further study.
在疑似患有冠心病(CAD)的女性样本中,研究通过社交网络量表测量的社会关系与冠心病风险及死亡率之间的关联。
503名(平均年龄59岁)因疑似CAD需进行临床检查的女性完成了一项诊断方案,包括心理社会测试、CAD危险因素评估和定量冠状动脉造影。随后对患者进行平均2.3年的随访,以追踪全因死亡率。
报告社交网络得分较高的女性呈现出冠心病风险降低的一致模式,包括较低的血糖水平(r = -0.11;p = 0.03)、较低的吸烟率(优势比[OR] = 0.81;95%置信区间[CI] = 0.71 - 0.93;p = 0.002)、较低的腰臀比(r = -0.18;p < 0.01)以及较低的高血压(OR = 0.90;95% CI = 0.81 - 0.99;p = 0.04)和糖尿病(OR = 0.83;95% CI = 0.73 - 0.94;p = 0.004)发生率。根据定量血管造影结果,社交网络得分高的患者CAD也较轻(社交网络得分低分组和高分组的平均血管造影狭窄值分别为40.8和27.2;p < 0.001)。最后,随访期间的死亡率与社交网络指数的四分位数得分呈现剂量反应模式,得分低的患者死亡率是得分高的患者的两倍多(相对风险 = 2.4;p = 0.03)。
在疑似患有CAD的女性队列中,社交圈子较小与CAD危险因素增加和死亡率升高相关,这种影响似乎在很大程度上由收入水平解释。这些发现通过强调疑似CAD女性中的风险,扩展了先前关于社交网络对健康影响的研究,并提出了进一步研究的机制。