Winning Ashley, Gilsanz Paola, Koenen Karestan C, Roberts Andrea L, Chen Qixuan, Sumner Jennifer A, Rimm Eric B, Maria Glymour M, Kubzansky Laura D
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Research and Evaluation, EMPath (Economic Mobility Pathways), Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Am J Prev Med. 2017 Jun;52(6):753-760. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.01.040. Epub 2017 Mar 18.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) may be associated with physical inactivity, a modifiable lifestyle factor that contributes to risk of cardiovascular and other chronic diseases; however, no study has evaluated the association between PTSD onset and subsequent physical activity (PA) changes.
Analyses were conducted between October 2014 and April 2016, using data from the ongoing Nurses' Health Study II (N=50,327). Trauma exposure and PTSD symptoms were assessed using two previously validated measures, the Brief Trauma Questionnaire and Short Screening Scale for DSM-IV PTSD. Average PA (hours/week) was assessed using self-report measures at six time points across 20 years (1989-2009). Linear mixed models with time-updated PTSD assessed differences in PA trajectories by trauma/PTSD status. Among a subsample of women whose trauma/PTSD onset during follow-up, group differences in PA patterns before and after onset were assessed using linear spline models.
PA decreased more steeply over time among trauma-exposed women reporting four or five (β= -2.5E, SE=1.0E, p=0.007) or six or seven PTSD symptoms (β= -6.7E, SE=1.1E, p<0.001) versus women without trauma exposure, adjusting for potential confounders. Among a subsample of women whose trauma/PTSD symptoms onset during follow-up, no differences in PA were observed prior to onset; after onset, women with six or seven PTSD symptoms had a steeper decline (β= -17.1E, SE=4.2E, p<0.001) in PA over time than trauma-exposed women without PTSD.
Decreases in PA associated with PTSD symptoms may be a pathway through which PTSD influences cardiovascular and other chronic diseases.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)可能与身体活动不足有关,身体活动不足是一种可改变的生活方式因素,会增加心血管疾病和其他慢性疾病的风险;然而,尚无研究评估PTSD发病与随后身体活动(PA)变化之间的关联。
于2014年10月至2016年4月进行分析,使用正在进行的护士健康研究II(N = 50,327)的数据。使用两种先前验证过的测量方法,即简易创伤问卷和DSM-IV PTSD简短筛查量表,评估创伤暴露和PTSD症状。通过自我报告测量在20年(1989 - 2009年)的六个时间点评估平均PA(小时/周)。使用时间更新的PTSD的线性混合模型评估创伤/PTSD状态下PA轨迹的差异。在随访期间创伤/PTSD发病的女性子样本中,使用线性样条模型评估发病前后PA模式的组间差异。
与未暴露于创伤的女性相比,报告有四或五个(β = -2.5E,SE = 1.0E,p = 0.007)或六或七个PTSD症状(β = -6.7E,SE = 1.1E,p < 0.001)的创伤暴露女性的PA随时间下降更为陡峭,对潜在混杂因素进行了调整。在随访期间创伤/PTSD症状发病的女性子样本中,发病前未观察到PA差异;发病后,有六或七个PTSD症状的女性的PA随时间下降比未患PTSD的创伤暴露女性更为陡峭(β = -17.1E,SE = 4.2E,p < 0.001)。
与PTSD症状相关的PA下降可能是PTSD影响心血管疾病和其他慢性疾病的一条途径。