Center for Behavioral Cardiovascular Health, Columbia University Medical Center, 622 W. 168th Street, PH 9-317, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
Center for Behavioral Cardiovascular Health, Columbia University Medical Center, 622 W. 168th Street, PH 9-311, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
J Behav Med. 2018 Jun;41(3):357-363. doi: 10.1007/s10865-017-9904-5. Epub 2017 Nov 29.
Evaluation for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) can trigger posttraumatic stress symptoms (PSS). Research suggests that younger, versus older, individuals may be at elevated risk for PSS after ACS evaluation. It has been proposed that younger individuals may be at greater risk because they perceive the suspected ACS event as more threatening than their older counterparts; however, this has yet to be tested. We examined whether perceived threat during ACS evaluation mediated the association between age and PSS after ACS evaluation in an observational cohort study of patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with suspected ACS. Demographics and perceived threat were assessed in the ED. PSS were measured upon inpatient transfer or by phone 3 days later. The analytic sample comprised 871 adult participants. Multiple linear regression was used to examine (1) associations of age and perceived threat with PSS and (2) whether perceived threat mediated the association. Bootstrapping with percentile-based confidence intervals (CIs) was used to test the indirect effect. Each year of age was associated with lower PSS (b = - 0.12, p < .001), independent of covariates. Older age was associated with lower perceived threat during ACS evaluation (b = - 0.05, p < .001). Greater threat perceptions predicted greater PSS (b = 0.94, p < .0001). The indirect effect (- 0.04) was statistically significant (95% CI - 0.07, - 0.02). Younger, versus older, individuals are at risk for greater PSS after ACS evaluation, and elevated perceived threat partially mediated this association. Understanding age differences in PSS development risk and the potential impact of age on threat perceptions may help inform ED treatment.
急性冠状动脉综合征 (ACS) 的评估可能引发创伤后应激症状 (PSS)。研究表明,在 ACS 评估后,年轻个体比老年个体更有可能出现 PSS。有人提出,年轻个体的风险更高,是因为他们认为疑似 ACS 事件比他们的老年同行更具威胁;然而,这尚未得到验证。我们在一项观察性队列研究中,检查了 ACS 评估期间感知到的威胁是否在 ACS 评估后年龄与 PSS 之间的关联中起中介作用,该研究纳入了因疑似 ACS 而到急诊科 (ED) 就诊的患者。ED 中评估了人口统计学特征和感知威胁。住院转科时或 3 天后通过电话测量 PSS。分析样本包括 871 名成年参与者。使用多元线性回归检验(1)年龄和感知威胁与 PSS 的关联,以及(2)感知威胁是否介导了该关联。基于百分位的置信区间 (CI) 的 bootstrap 用于检验间接效应。与年龄相关的 PSS 呈负相关(b = -0.12,p <.001),与协变量无关。ACS 评估期间年龄越大,感知威胁越低(b = -0.05,p <.001)。感知威胁越大,PSS 越高(b = 0.94,p <.0001)。间接效应 (-0.04) 具有统计学意义(95% CI -0.07,-0.02)。与老年个体相比,年轻个体在 ACS 评估后发生更大 PSS 的风险更高,感知威胁升高部分介导了这种关联。了解 PSS 发展风险方面的年龄差异以及年龄对威胁感知的潜在影响,可能有助于指导 ED 治疗。