Department of Public Health, Yonsei University Graduate School, Seoul, Korea.
Department of Preventive Medicine, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea; Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases Etiology Research Center, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
J Affect Disord. 2020 Jul 1;272:380-387. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2020.03.174. Epub 2020 May 1.
Background This study aimed to investigate the association between depression and the augmentation index (AIx), and to further investigate whether there is a difference in this association according to the patients' inflammatory status. Methods This study included 458 men and 815 women (mean age: 49.35 years), a community-dwelling and middle-aged Korean population. The Korean version of the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) was used to assess depressive symptoms. Arterial stiffness was evaluated via an AIx normalized to 75 beats/min. We confirmed two factors from BDI-II after conducting a factor analysis. Multiple regression models were used after adjusting for socio-demographic factors, lifestyle factors, systolic blood pressure, diabetes history, and body mass index. We further stratified the data according to inflammatory biomarkers with cutoffs of the 75 percentile. Results There was a significant positive association between the BDI-II score and arterial stiffness (ß= 0.09, p-value=0.037). In women, the somatic-affective factor showed a stronger positive association (ß= 0.20, p-value=0.018) with arterial stiffness than the cognitive factor (ß= 0.12, p-value=0.148). There was no significant association in men (ß= -0.01, p-value=0.943). In subgroup analyses, women showed significant positive associations between the somatic affective factor of depressive symptoms on and arterial stiffness according to both inflammatory markers (IL-6: ß= 0.17, p-value=0.039; hs-CRP: ß= 0.17, p-value=0.094) Limitations The design of the cross-sectional study limits causal interpretation. Conclusion Depression and its somatic-affective factor were positively associated with arterial stiffness in women. Inflammatory status may be involved in modifying the association between depressive symptoms, its sub-factors, and AIx.
本研究旨在探讨抑郁与增强指数(AIx)之间的关系,并进一步研究根据患者的炎症状态,这种关系是否存在差异。
本研究纳入了 458 名男性和 815 名女性(平均年龄:49.35 岁),均为社区居住的中年韩国人。采用贝克抑郁量表第二版(BDI-II)评估抑郁症状。通过 AIx 标准化至 75 次/分评估动脉僵硬度。我们通过因子分析确认了 BDI-II 的两个因子。在调整了社会人口统计学因素、生活方式因素、收缩压、糖尿病史和体重指数后,我们使用多元回归模型进行分析。我们进一步根据炎症生物标志物的第 75 百分位数对数据进行分层。
BDI-II 评分与动脉僵硬度呈显著正相关(β=0.09,p 值=0.037)。在女性中,躯体情感因子与动脉僵硬度的正相关性更强(β=0.20,p 值=0.018),而认知因子的正相关性较弱(β=0.12,p 值=0.148)。在男性中,没有显著相关性(β=-0.01,p 值=0.943)。在亚组分析中,根据两种炎症标志物,女性的抑郁症状躯体情感因子与动脉僵硬度呈显著正相关(IL-6:β=0.17,p 值=0.039;hs-CRP:β=0.17,p 值=0.094)。
横断面研究的设计限制了因果关系的解释。
抑郁及其躯体情感因子与女性动脉僵硬度呈正相关。炎症状态可能参与调节抑郁症状及其亚因子与 AIx 之间的关系。