Symptoms
of depression linked to early stages of artery
disease
Newswise — Depressive
symptoms—especially physical signs, such as fatigue
and loss of appetite—may be associated with
thickening arteries, which may reflect an early sign
of coronary artery disease, according to a report in
the February issue of Archives of General
Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
Considerable evidence suggests
that depression, anger and other negative emotions
are associated with the risk for coronary artery
disease, which occurs when the vessels carrying
blood to the heart become narrowed and thickened.
However, most studies have
assessed the risk for heart attack or sudden cardiac
death, according to background information in the
article.
Because these events are later
steps in the development of coronary artery disease,
it is currently unclear whether depression, anxiety
and other negative emotions play a role in early
disease processes.
Jesse C. Stewart, Ph.D., then
at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
and now at Indiana University–Purdue University
Indianapolis, and colleagues studied 324 men and
women who were an average of 60.6 years old.
At the beginning of the study,
participants attended 11 visits in a five-month
period, including a medical screening; testing for
cardiovascular risk factors, including high blood
pressure and high cholesterol; questionnaires to
assess depression, anxiety, hostility and anger; and
ultrasound tests to determine carotid artery intima-media
thickness (IMT), a measure of the inner layers of
the arteries that is related to early-stage coronary
artery disease. Cardiovascular risk factors and IMT
were assessed again after three years.
“Regression analyses indicated
that higher depressive symptoms at baseline were
associated with greater three-year change in carotid
intima-media thickness, even after taking into
account demographic factors, cardiovascular risk
factors, medication use, medical conditions and
other correlated negative emotions,” the authors
write. “Measures of anxiety symptoms, hostility,
anger experience and anger expression were each
unrelated to intima-media thickness change.”
To further understand the role
of specific depressive symptoms in IMT, the
researchers separated the condition down into two
components: a somatic-vegetative score, which
includes physical indicators such as fatigue and
appetite disturbance, and a cognitive-affective
score, which includes sadness, pessimism and other
emotions associated with depression.
Analysis of each component
revealed that the somatic-vegetative score, but not
the cognitive-affective score, was linked to IMT
thickness.
“Taken together, our results
indicate that depression, but perhaps not anxiety
and hostility/anger, may be involved in the
initiation and/or progression of atherosclerosis,”
or hardening of the arteries, the authors write.
“More specifically, our findings suggest that the
somatic-vegetative features of depression that are
not shared with other negative emotions may play an
important role in the earlier stages of coronary
artery disease development.”
Few previous studies have
looked at several negative emotions at once, but
this approach will be critical in understanding the
links between these psychological variables and
physical disease, they conclude. “Identifying these
components, in turn, may provide insights into the
mechanisms underlying the negative emotion–coronary
artery disease relationships and may facilitate the
development of focused interventions designed to
reduce the coronary artery disease risk of
individuals prone to experience negative emotions.”