Department of Psychology, University of Maryland-Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland.
Am J Hypertens. 2013 Dec;26(12):1413-20. doi: 10.1093/ajh/hpt135. Epub 2013 Aug 19.
Longitudinal associations between depressive symptoms and blood pressure have been inconsistent. Most studies have examined incident hypertension as an outcome, and few have examined effect modification.
This study examined moderating influences of sex and age on coincident trajectories of depressive symptoms and blood pressure among 2,087 participants from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (aged 19-97 years; 53% men; 74% white). Participants underwent clinical blood pressure measurement and completed the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression (CES-D) scale on up to 14 occasions (mean = 3.8; SD = 2.6) over up to 29 years (mean = 7.8; SD = 6.4). CES-D was log-transformed (CES-D(log)) for analyses.
Mixed-effects regression revealed that prospective relations of CES-D(log) to diastolic blood pressure differed by age in women (b = 0.095; P = 0.001) but not men; greater CES-D(log) attenuated the expected age-related decline in diastolic blood pressure. Across all testing sessions, greater CES-D(log) was associated significantly with higher average systolic blood pressure for women (b = 2.238; P = 0.006) but not men. Age-stratified analyses showed that greater CES-D(log) was associated significantly with higher average systolic (b = 3.348; P = 0.02) and diastolic (b = 1.730; P < 0.03) blood pressure for older adults (≥58.8 years at first visit). In the younger age cohort, sex moderated the relation of CES-D(log) to systolic blood pressure (b = -3.563; P = 0.007); greater CES-D(log) in women, but lesser CES-D(log) in men, was associated with higher systolic blood pressure.
Results demonstrate sex and age differences in the relation between depressive symptoms and blood pressure. Findings suggest the potential importance of preventing, detecting, and lowering depressive symptoms to prevent hypertension among women and older adults.
抑郁症状与血压之间的纵向关联一直不一致。大多数研究都将新发高血压作为结果进行了检验,而很少有研究检验了效应修饰。
本研究在巴尔的摩老龄化纵向研究(年龄在 19-97 岁之间;53%为男性;74%为白人)的 2087 名参与者中,检验了抑郁症状和血压同时出现的轨迹变化与性别和年龄的调节作用。参与者接受了临床血压测量,并在 29 年的时间里(平均=7.8 年;SD=6.4 年)完成了多达 14 次中心流行病学研究抑郁量表(CES-D)的评估(平均=3.8 次;SD=2.6 次)。CES-D 量表用于分析的结果被转换为自然对数(CES-D(log))。
混合效应回归显示,女性的 CES-D(log)与舒张压的前瞻性关系随年龄而变化(b=0.095;P=0.001),但在男性中则没有;CES-D(log)的增加减弱了预期的与年龄相关的舒张压下降。在所有测试阶段,对于女性,较高的 CES-D(log)与较高的平均收缩压显著相关(b=2.238;P=0.006),但对于男性则没有。按年龄分层分析显示,CES-D(log)与较高的平均收缩压(b=3.348;P=0.02)和舒张压(b=1.730;P<0.03)显著相关,尤其是对于年龄较大的成年人(第一次就诊时年龄≥58.8 岁)。在年龄较小的队列中,性别调节了 CES-D(log)与收缩压的关系(b=-3.563;P=0.007);CES-D(log)较高的女性,而非 CES-D(log)较低的男性,与较高的收缩压相关。
研究结果表明抑郁症状与血压之间的关系存在性别和年龄差异。研究结果表明,预防、检测和降低抑郁症状可能对预防女性和老年人群的高血压具有重要意义。