The Rochester Center for Mind-Body Research, Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester, 300 Crittenden Boulevard, Box PSYCH-BPSM, Rochester, NY 14642, United States.
Soc Sci Med. 2011 May;72(9):1482-8. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.03.016. Epub 2011 Mar 30.
Social isolation confers increased risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) events and mortality. In two recent studies, low levels of social integration among older adults were related to higher levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), a marker of inflammation, suggesting a possible biological link between social isolation and CHD. The current study examined relationships among social isolation, CRP, and 15-year CHD death in a community sample of US adults aged 40 years and older without a prior history of myocardial infarction. A nested case-cohort study was conducted from a parent cohort of community-dwelling adults from the southeastern New England region of the United States (N = 2321) who were interviewed in 1989 and 1990. CRP levels were measured from stored sera provided by the nested case-cohort (n = 370), which included all cases of CHD death observed through 2005 (n = 48), and a random sample of non-cases. We found that the most socially isolated individuals had two-and-a-half times the odds of elevated CRP levels compared to the most socially integrated. In separate logistic regression models, both social isolation and CRP predicted later CHD death. The most socially isolated continued to have more than twice the odds of CHD death compared to the most socially integrated in a model adjusting for CRP and more traditional CHD risk factors. The current findings support social isolation as an independent risk factor of both high levels of CRP and CHD death in middle-aged adults without a prior history of myocardial infarction. Prospective study of inflammatory pathways related to social isolation and mortality are needed to fully delineate whether and how CRP or other inflammatory markers contribute to mechanisms linking social isolation to CVD health.
社会隔离会增加患冠心病(CHD)的风险和死亡率。在最近的两项研究中,老年人社会融合程度低与 C 反应蛋白(CRP)水平升高有关,CRP 是炎症的标志物,这表明社会隔离与 CHD 之间可能存在生物学联系。本研究在一个没有心肌梗死病史的美国成年人社区样本中,调查了社会隔离、CRP 和 15 年 CHD 死亡之间的关系。该研究采用巢式病例对照研究设计,从美国东南部新英格兰地区的社区居住成年人的母队列中抽取样本(N=2321),这些成年人于 1989 年和 1990 年接受了访谈。通过巢式病例对照(n=370)获得了储存的血清,测量了 CRP 水平,其中包括截至 2005 年观察到的所有 CHD 死亡病例(n=48),以及一个非病例的随机样本。研究结果显示,与社会融合程度最高的个体相比,最孤立的个体 CRP 水平升高的几率高出两倍半。在单独的逻辑回归模型中,社会隔离和 CRP 均预测了随后的 CHD 死亡。在调整 CRP 和更传统的 CHD 风险因素的模型中,与社会融合程度最高的个体相比,最孤立的个体发生 CHD 死亡的几率仍然高出两倍以上。这些发现支持社会隔离是中年人群中 CRP 水平升高和 CHD 死亡的独立危险因素,这些个体没有心肌梗死病史。需要进行前瞻性研究,以充分阐明与社会隔离和死亡率相关的炎症途径,以及 CRP 或其他炎症标志物是否以及如何有助于解释社会隔离与 CVD 健康之间的联系机制。