Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Virginia Commonwealth University College of Engineering, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
J Clin Invest. 2024 Sep 17;134(18):e180072. doi: 10.1172/JCI180072.
Depression and multiple musculoskeletal disorders are overrepresented in women compared with men. Given that depression is a modifiable risk factor and improvement of depressive symptoms increases positive outcomes following orthopedic intervention, efforts to improve clinical recognition of depressive symptoms and increased action toward ameliorating depressive symptoms among orthopedic patients are positioned to reduce complications and positively affect patient-reported outcomes. Although psychosocial factors play a role in the manifestation and remittance of depression, it is also well appreciated that primary biochemical changes are capable of causing and perpetuating depression. Unique insight for novel treatments of depression may be facilitated by query of the bidirectional relationship between musculoskeletal health and depression. This Review aims to synthesize the diverse literature on sex, depression, and orthopedics and emphasize the potential for common underlying biological substrates. Given the overrepresentation of depression and musculoskeletal disorders among women, increased emphasis on the biological drivers of the co-occurrence of these disorders is positioned to improve women's health.
与男性相比,女性中抑郁和多种肌肉骨骼疾病更为常见。鉴于抑郁是一个可改变的危险因素,改善抑郁症状会增加骨科干预后的积极结果,因此,努力提高对抑郁症状的临床认识并采取更多措施改善骨科患者的抑郁症状,有望减少并发症并对患者报告的结果产生积极影响。虽然心理社会因素在抑郁的表现和缓解中起作用,但也充分认识到原发性生化变化能够导致和持续抑郁。通过查询肌肉骨骼健康与抑郁之间的双向关系,可能为抑郁的新治疗方法提供独特的见解。本综述旨在综合关于性别、抑郁和骨科的多样化文献,并强调潜在的共同生物学基础。鉴于女性中抑郁和肌肉骨骼疾病的比例过高,更多地关注这些疾病同时发生的生物学驱动因素,有望改善女性的健康状况。