Depression Behavior Changes and Heart Risks Denver CO

Depression has long been recognized as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease in healthy people and for recurrent events in patients with cardiovascular disease.

Local Companies

Westside Behavioral Care, Inc.
(877) 822-3002
222 Milwaukee
Denver, CO
Acuna Tony Phd & Shelly Phd
(303) 765-2829
1720 S Bellaire
Denver, CO
Adelman Stuart Phd Psycholgst
(303) 428-2540
51 W 84th
Denver, CO
All Age Counseling Corp
(303) 435-5522
1011 S Valentia
Denver, CO
Alpar Counseling Service
(303) 329-8209
1330 Leyden
Denver, CO
Anderson Laura Md
(303) 300-0220
4900 Cherry Creek
Denver, CO
Answers
(303) 789-0646
3110 S Wadsworth
Denver, CO
Aurora Mental Health Center
(303) 366-2175
1611 Nome
Aurora, CO
Anthony Mary Lcsw
(303) 421-3313
7651 W 41st
Wheat Ridge, CO
Cousins Philadelphia Psychologist
(303) 421-3811
4251 Kipling
Wheat Ridge, CO

Negative changes in health behaviors are a major reason why heart patients with depression have an increased risk of cardiovascular events such as heart attack, say U.S. researchers who followed 1,017 outpatients with stable coronary heart disease for an average of 4.8 years.

Depression has long been recognized as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease in healthy people and for recurrent events in patients with cardiovascular disease. But the reason for this association hasn't been clear.

Dr. Mary A. Whooley, of the VA Medical Center in San Francisco, and her colleagues used a questionnaire to measure the heart disease patients' symptoms of depression. The researchers then used various models to evaluate the connection between subsequent cardiovascular events (such as heart failure, heart attack, stroke), depression, disease severity at the start of the study, and biological and behavioral factors.

The researchers found that patients with depression had a 50 percent greater risk of cardiovascular events -- 10 percent among those with depression compared to 6.7 among those without depression. When the researchers adjusted for other existing conditions and cardiac disease severity, depression was associated with a 31 percent increased risk of cardiovascular events.

Whooley and her colleagues further adjusted for certain health behaviors, including physical inactivity, and found there was no longer a significant association between depression and cardiovascular events. They calculated that physical inactivity was associated with a 44 percent greater rate of cardiovascular events.

Heart patients with depression are less likely to follow dietary, exercise and medication recommendations, and poor health behaviors can lead to cardiovascular events, said the authors of the study, which was published in the Nov. 26 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

"Understanding how depression leads to cardiovascular events is necessary for developing interventions to decrease the excess cardiovascular morbidity (illness) and mortality (death) associated with depression," Whooley and her colleagues wrote.

They said their findings "raise the hypothesis that the increased risk of cardiovascular events associated with depression could potentially be preventable with behavior modifications, especially exercise. Given the relatively modest effects of traditional therapies on depressive symptoms in patients with heart disease, there is increasing urgency to identify interventions that not only reduce depressive symptoms, but also directly target the mechanisms by which depression leads to cardiovascular events."

More information

Mental Health America has more about depression and co-occurring disorders.

SOURCE: Journal of the American Medical Association, news release, Nov. 25, 2008

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

Read Article at HealthDay.com

Featured Local Company

Westside Behavioral Care, Inc.

8778223002
222 Milwaukee
Denver, CO