Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, GA 30322, USA.
Prog Cardiovasc Dis. 2013 May-Jun;55(6):557-62. doi: 10.1016/j.pcad.2013.03.005. Epub 2013 Apr 6.
Psychosocial factors are associated with cardiovascular disease, but little is known about the role of genetics in this relationship. Focusing on the well-studied phenotype of depression, current data show that there are shared genetic factors that may give rise to both depression and CVD, and these genetic risks appear to be modified by gender. This pleiotropic effect suggests that a single pathway, when perturbed, gives rise to the dual phenotypes of CVD and depression. The data also suggest that women contribute disproportionately to the depression-CVD comorbidity, and this unbalanced contribution is attributable, in part, to genetic factors. While the underlying biology behind this relationship is unclear, recent data support contributions from inflammatory or serotonergic pathways toward the comorbidity between CVD and depression. Even without knowledge of a specific mechanism, epidemiological observations offer new directions to explain the relationship between depression and CVD that have both research and clinical applications.
心理社会因素与心血管疾病有关,但遗传因素在这种关系中的作用知之甚少。目前的研究集中在研究充分的抑郁表型上,数据表明,可能存在共同的遗传因素,导致抑郁和心血管疾病同时发生,而且这些遗传风险似乎受到性别影响。这种多效性效应表明,当单一通路受到干扰时,会导致心血管疾病和抑郁的双重表型。数据还表明,女性对抑郁与心血管疾病共病的贡献不成比例,这种不平衡的贡献部分归因于遗传因素。尽管这种关系背后的生物学机制尚不清楚,但最近的数据支持炎症或 5-羟色胺能通路对心血管疾病和抑郁共病的贡献。即使没有特定机制的知识,流行病学观察也为解释抑郁和心血管疾病之间的关系提供了新的方向,这些关系既有研究意义,也有临床应用价值。