Roohafza Hamidreza, Noohi Feridoun, Bagherieh Sara, Mansourian Marjan, Babahajiani Media, Marateb Hamidreza, Alemzadeh Ansari Mohammadjavad, Mousavi Aboozar Fakhr, Peighambari Mohammad Mehdi, Sadeghi Masoumeh
Isfahan Cardiovascular Research Center, Cardiovascular Research Institute, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran.
Cardiovascular Intervention Research Center, Rajaie Cardiovascular Medical and Research Center, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
PLoS One. 2025 Jun 30;20(6):e0325140. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0325140. eCollection 2025.
Reducing the amount of time between the onset of symptoms and presentation to a healthcare facility, namely the "pain-to-door" interval, is of utmost importance in patients with myocardial infarction. In the present study, we aimed to shed light on the psychological, medical, and demographic factors that are associated with this vital time, and the details of this association.
We used the baseline data of 1685 participants from a 3-year, multi-centric, cohort study. The pain to door time was estimated as the interval between symptoms' onset and arrival at the hospital. Patients were asked to fill out valid and reliable questionnaires regarding sociodemographic factors, depression, health anxiety, type D personality, sense of coherence, coping strategies, and quality of life. Data was then analyzed to attain the p-value and hazard ratios (HR) of different variables.
In the multivariate analysis, being male (HR: 0.81, 95% CI: 0.68-0.98) and a history of angina (0.82, 0.69-0.96) were associated with shorter pain-to-door durations. A history of diabetes mellitus also made the cut marginally (p-value: 0.059). On the contrary, health anxiety (1.27, 1.09-1.49), history of depression (1.57, 1.21-2.05), high socioeconomic status (1.25, 1.03-1.51) and sense of coherence (1.34, 1.14-1.57) scores were associated with longer pain-to-door durations.
Our findings demonstrate that personal, social, and economical characteristics play a pivotal role in determining patients' pain-to-door time duration. Screening high-risk individuals in terms of the factors that tend to increase the pain-to-door time alongside educating people and healthcare providers on the importance of this interval and its contributing factors must be a priority considering the devastating burden of CVDs.
对于心肌梗死患者而言,缩短症状出现至前往医疗机构就诊的时间,即“疼痛至入院”间隔时间至关重要。在本研究中,我们旨在阐明与这一关键时间相关的心理、医学和人口统计学因素,以及这种关联的细节。
我们使用了一项为期3年的多中心队列研究中1685名参与者的基线数据。疼痛至入院时间被估计为症状出现至抵达医院的间隔时间。患者被要求填写关于社会人口统计学因素、抑郁、健康焦虑、D型人格、连贯感、应对策略和生活质量的有效且可靠的问卷。然后对数据进行分析以获得不同变量的p值和风险比(HR)。
在多变量分析中,男性(HR:0.81,95%CI:0.68 - 0.98)和有心绞痛病史(0.82,0.69 - 0.96)与较短的疼痛至入院持续时间相关。糖尿病病史也勉强达到临界值(p值:0.059)。相反,健康焦虑(1.27,1.09 - 1.49)、抑郁病史(1.57,1.21 - 2.05)、高社会经济地位(1.25,1.03 - 1.51)和连贯感得分(1.34,1.14 - 1.57)与较长的疼痛至入院持续时间相关。
我们的研究结果表明,个人、社会和经济特征在决定患者的疼痛至入院时间长短方面起着关键作用。鉴于心血管疾病的巨大负担,考虑到那些往往会增加疼痛至入院时间的因素,筛查高危个体,同时向公众和医疗服务提供者宣传这一间隔时间及其影响因素的重要性,必须成为优先事项。