Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System, Rehabilitation Care Service, Seattle, WA.
Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System, Rehabilitation Care Service, Seattle, WA; Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2019 Aug;100(8):1426-1433.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2018.11.024. Epub 2018 Dec 31.
Characterize the course of depressive symptoms during the first year after dysvascular amputation and identify factors that predict symptom trajectories.
Prospective cohort study of individuals undergoing lower extremity amputation (LEA), surveyed at 4 time points (perioperative period, 6 weeks, 4 months, and 12 months postamputation). Multilevel modeling was used to describe and predict trajectories.
Four Veterans Affairs medical centers, a university hospital, and a level I trauma center.
Participants (N=141; 74% retention) were a consecutive sample, eligible if they were undergoing their first unilateral LEA secondary to dysvascular disease.
Not applicable.
Patient Health Questionnaire-9.
Approximately 40% of participants endorsed at least moderate depressive symptoms at perioperative baseline. Individuals with greater depressive symptoms in the perioperative period concurrently reported greater pain, poorer self-rated health, and prior mental health treatment. In the first 6 weeks after amputation there was a substantial improvement in depressive symptoms, especially among individuals with greater symptoms at baseline. Depressive symptoms were generally stable after 6 weeks. None of the covariates assessed significantly predicted trajectories of depressive symptom improvement.
Watchful waiting may be the most appropriate course of action for many patients in the first 6 weeks after amputation. After 6 weeks, however, symptom levels tend to stabilize, suggesting that active intervention is called for if patients remain depressed at this point. Some patients may benefit from more proactive intervention, such as those with prior mental health treatment histories.
描述血管性下肢截肢术后第一年抑郁症状的发展过程,并确定预测症状轨迹的因素。
对接受下肢截肢(LEA)的个体进行前瞻性队列研究,在 4 个时间点(围手术期、6 周、4 个月和 12 个月截肢后)进行调查。使用多层次建模来描述和预测轨迹。
四家退伍军人事务医疗中心、一家大学医院和一家一级创伤中心。
参与者(N=141;保留率为 74%)是一个连续样本,如果他们因血管性疾病而首次接受单侧 LEA,则符合条件。
不适用。
患者健康问卷-9。
约 40%的参与者在围手术期基线时至少有中度抑郁症状。围手术期抑郁症状较重的个体同时报告疼痛更严重、自我评估健康状况较差和先前的心理健康治疗。截肢后 6 周内抑郁症状有明显改善,尤其是在基线时症状较重的个体中。6 周后抑郁症状通常稳定,评估的协变量均无显著预测抑郁症状改善的轨迹。
对于截肢后 6 周内的许多患者,静观其变可能是最合适的治疗方法。然而,6 周后,症状水平往往趋于稳定,如果患者在此点仍然抑郁,建议积极干预。如果患者在此点仍然抑郁,建议积极干预。一些患者可能会从更积极的干预中受益,例如那些有既往心理健康治疗史的患者。