Martens E J, Nyklícek I, Szabó B M, Kupper N
CoRPS-Centre of Research on Psychology in Somatic Diseases, Tilburg University, and Department of Cardiology, St Elisabeth Hospital Tilburg, Tilburg, The Netherlands.
Psychol Med. 2008 Mar;38(3):375-83. doi: 10.1017/S0033291707002097. Epub 2007 Nov 8.
Reduced heart rate variability (HRV) is a prognostic factor for cardiac mortality. Both depression and anxiety have been associated with increased risk for mortality in cardiac patients. Low HRV may act as an intermediary in this association. The present study examined to what extent depression and anxiety differently predict 24-h HRV indices recorded post-myocardial infarction (MI).
Ninety-three patients were recruited during hospitalization for MI and assessed on self-reported symptoms of depression and anxiety. Two months post-MI, patients were assessed on clinical diagnoses of lifetime depressive and anxiety disorder. Adequate 24-h ambulatory electrocardiography data were obtained from 82 patients on average 78 days post-MI.
In unadjusted analyses, lifetime diagnoses of major depressive disorder was predictive of lower SDNN [standard deviation of all normal-to-normal (NN) intervals; beta=-0.26, p=0.022] and SDANN (standard deviation of all 5-min mean NN intervals; beta=0.25, p=0.023), and lifetime anxiety disorder of lower RMSSD (root mean square of successive differences; beta=-0.23, p=0.039). Depression and anxiety symptoms did not significantly predict HRV. After adjustment for age, sex, cardiac history and multi-vessel disease, lifetime depressive disorder was no longer predictive of HRV. Lifetime anxiety disorder predicted reduced high-frequency spectral power (beta=-0.22, p=0.039) and RMSSD (beta=-0.25, p=0.019), even after additional adjustment of anxiety symptoms.
Clinical anxiety, but not depression, negatively influenced parasympathetic modulation of heart rate in post-MI patients. These findings elucidate the physiological mechanisms underlying anxiety as a risk factor for adverse outcomes, but also raise questions about the potential role of HRV as an intermediary between depression and post-MI prognosis.
心率变异性(HRV)降低是心脏性死亡的一个预后因素。抑郁和焦虑均与心脏病患者的死亡风险增加有关。低HRV可能在此关联中起中介作用。本研究探讨了抑郁和焦虑在多大程度上对心肌梗死(MI)后记录的24小时HRV指标有不同的预测作用。
93例MI住院患者被招募,并对其抑郁和焦虑的自我报告症状进行评估。MI后两个月,对患者进行终生抑郁和焦虑障碍的临床诊断评估。从82例患者中获得了充足的24小时动态心电图数据,平均在MI后78天。
在未校正分析中,终生诊断为重度抑郁症可预测较低的SDNN[全部正常到正常(NN)间期的标准差;β=-0.26,p=0.022]和SDANN(全部5分钟平均NN间期的标准差;β=-0.25,p=0.023),终生焦虑障碍可预测较低的RMSSD[连续差值的均方根;β=-0.23,p=0.039]。抑郁和焦虑症状对HRV无显著预测作用。在调整年龄、性别、心脏病史和多支血管病变后,终生抑郁症不再对HRV有预测作用。即使在进一步调整焦虑症状后,终生焦虑障碍仍可预测高频谱功率降低(β=-0.22,p=0.039)和RMSSD降低(β=-0.25,p=0.019)。
临床焦虑而非抑郁对MI后患者心率的副交感神经调节有负面影响。这些发现阐明了焦虑作为不良结局危险因素的生理机制,但也对HRV作为抑郁与MI后预后之间中介的潜在作用提出了疑问。