Ormel Johan, Von Korff Michael, Burger Huibert, Scott Kate, Demyttenaere Koen, Huang Yue-qin, Posada-Villa José, Pierre Lepine Jean, Angermeyer Matthias C, Levinson Daphna, de Girolamo Giovanni, Kawakami Norito, Karam Elie, Medina-Mora María Elena, Gureje Oye, Williams David, Haro Josep Maria, Bromet Evelyn J, Alonso Jordi, Kessler Ron
Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, 9700 RB Groningen, The Netherlands.
Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2007 Jul-Aug;29(4):325-34. doi: 10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2007.03.009.
While depression and heart disease often co-occur in Western countries, less is known about the association of anxiety and alcohol use disorders with heart disease and about the cross-cultural consistency of this association. Consistency across emotional disorders and cultures would suggest that relatively universal mechanisms underlie the association.
Surveys with 18 random population samples of household-residing adults in 17 countries in Europe, the Americas, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and the South Pacific were carried out. Medically recognized heart disease was ascertained by self-report. Mental disorders were assessed with the World Mental Health Composite International Diagnostic Interview, a fully structured diagnostic interview.
Specific mood and anxiety disorders occurred among persons with heart disease at rates higher than those among persons without heart disease. Adjusted for sex and age, the pooled odds ratios (95% confidence interval) were 2.1 (1.9-2.5) for mood disorders, 2.2 (1.9-2.5) for anxiety disorders and 1.4 (1.0-1.9) for alcohol abuse/dependence among persons with versus those without heart disease. These patterns were similar across countries.
An excess of anxiety disorders and that of mood disorders are found among persons with heart disease. These associations hold true across countries despite substantial between-country differences in culture and mental disorder prevalence rates. These results suggest that similar mechanisms underlie the association and that a broad spectrum of mood-anxiety disorders should be considered in research on the comorbidity of mental disorders and heart disease.
在西方国家,抑郁症和心脏病常常同时出现,但对于焦虑症及酒精使用障碍与心脏病之间的关联以及这种关联在不同文化间的一致性,人们了解较少。情绪障碍和不同文化间的一致性表明,这种关联背后存在相对普遍的机制。
对欧洲、美洲、中东、非洲、亚洲和南太平洋17个国家的18个成年居民随机抽样家庭样本进行了调查。通过自我报告确定经医学认可的心脏病。使用世界心理健康综合国际诊断访谈对精神障碍进行评估,这是一种完全结构化的诊断访谈。
患有心脏病的人群中特定情绪和焦虑障碍的发生率高于没有心脏病的人群。在对性别和年龄进行调整后,患有心脏病与未患心脏病的人群相比,情绪障碍的合并优势比(95%置信区间)为2.1(1.9 - 2.5),焦虑障碍为2.2(1.9 - 2.5),酒精滥用/依赖为1.4(1.0 - 1.9)。这些模式在不同国家相似。
患有心脏病的人群中焦虑障碍和情绪障碍的发生率过高。尽管不同国家在文化和精神障碍患病率方面存在显著差异,但这些关联在各国都成立。这些结果表明,这种关联背后存在相似的机制,并且在研究精神障碍与心脏病的共病时应考虑广泛的情绪 - 焦虑障碍。