Hayes Sharonne N
Cardiovascular Disease & Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Womens Health (Lond). 2009 Nov;5(6):709-25. doi: 10.2217/whe.09.56.
The importance of mind-body health relationships has been recognized for decades, but only recently has the wider medical and cardiovascular community become engaged in understanding and addressing the complex, bidirectional risk relationship between cardiovascular disease (CVD) and depression. Furthermore, it has become increasingly clear that there are incompletely understood sex differences in incidence and outcomes for both conditions that should guide treatment and future research efforts. This review will explore the role of depression in women as a risk factor for incident CVD, its impact on women already suffering from CVD, proposed psychobiologic mechanisms and links, and the implications of sex differences on diagnosis and treatment.
身心与健康关系的重要性已被认识数十年,但直到最近,更广泛的医学和心血管领域才开始致力于理解和应对心血管疾病(CVD)与抑郁症之间复杂的双向风险关系。此外,越来越明显的是,这两种疾病在发病率和预后方面存在尚未完全理解的性别差异,这些差异应指导治疗和未来的研究工作。本综述将探讨抑郁症在女性中作为新发CVD风险因素的作用、其对已患CVD女性的影响、提出的心理生物学机制及联系,以及性别差异对诊断和治疗的影响。