Bruce D G, Casey G, Davis W A, Starkstein S E, Clarnette R C, Foster J K, Ives F J, Almeida O P, Davis T M E
School of Medicine and Pharmacology, University of Western Australia, Fremantle Hospital, Fremantle, Western Australia, Australia.
Diabetologia. 2006 Dec;49(12):2828-36. doi: 10.1007/s00125-006-0478-y. Epub 2006 Oct 13.
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Cerebrovascular disease may be causal or a vulnerability factor in late-onset depression and may explain the high rate of depression in older adults with diabetes. We explored a wide range of potential explanatory variables of depression in a longitudinal study of older diabetic subjects to investigate the vascular depression hypothesis in these patients.
We recruited 207 subjects with diabetes selected for potential cognitive deficits from an existing observational cohort study (average age 75.7 +/- 4.6 years, 52.2% men) for an assessment of depression using a standardised diagnostic instrument (Cambridge Examination for Mental Disorders of the Elderly -- Revised). All subjects underwent a detailed clinical assessment at baseline and at follow-up (after 7.5 +/- 1.1 years).
Major depression was present in 45 subjects (21.7%) and minor depression in ten (4.8%). A positive history of strokes and the presence of peripheral arterial disease were significantly associated with depression at the time of diagnosis. In a subsample of 93 cases who underwent structural neuroimaging, the presence of cerebral infarcts was also significantly associated with depression. Treatment with glucose-lowering therapy, higher serum cholesterol levels and difficulties with activities of daily living at baseline were significant predictors of depression at follow-up.
CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: A history of cerebrovascular disease was strongly associated with depression and cerebrovascular risk factors were significant predictors of depression in older diabetic patients. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that the excess risk of depression in older diabetic patients is related to underlying cerebrovascular disease.
目的/假设:脑血管疾病可能是迟发性抑郁症的病因或易患因素,并且可以解释老年糖尿病患者中抑郁症的高发病率。我们在一项针对老年糖尿病患者的纵向研究中探索了抑郁症的一系列潜在解释变量,以研究这些患者的血管性抑郁假说。
我们从一项现有的观察性队列研究中招募了207名有潜在认知缺陷的糖尿病患者(平均年龄75.7±4.6岁,男性占52.2%),使用标准化诊断工具(剑桥老年精神障碍检查修订版)评估抑郁症。所有受试者在基线和随访时(7.5±1.1年后)都接受了详细的临床评估。
45名受试者(21.7%)患有重度抑郁症,10名(4.8%)患有轻度抑郁症。中风病史阳性和外周动脉疾病的存在与诊断时的抑郁症显著相关。在接受结构神经影像学检查的93例患者的子样本中,脑梗死的存在也与抑郁症显著相关。降糖治疗、较高的血清胆固醇水平以及基线时日常生活活动困难是随访时抑郁症的显著预测因素。
结论/解读:脑血管疾病史与抑郁症密切相关,脑血管危险因素是老年糖尿病患者抑郁症的显著预测因素。我们的研究结果与以下假说一致,即老年糖尿病患者抑郁症的额外风险与潜在的脑血管疾病有关。