Stress and anxiety lead to poorer health says research
Stress, anixiety and depression lead to poor health habits says research
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Tuesday, 16, Dec 2008 11:59
People who suffer from psychological distress are also likely to fall into bad health habits according to new research published in the latest issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC).
It says people who suffer from common but extreme forms psychological problems such as stress, anxiety or depression will also be more prone to smoking or physical inactivity.
It says over several years, these two factors alone may account for nearly two-thirds of the risk of heart attack and other cardiovascular illnesses in people with depression and anxiety.
Mark Hamer, a senior research fellow at University College London, UK, said: "Psychological distress is a growing problem. It's very important that physicians try to identify psychological distress, but it's also important to look at the behaviors and the risk factors that are associated with it."
Previous studies have established the link between psychological distress and heart disease, but until now there has been insufficient evidence to show that treating depression and anxiety can reduce the risk of heart attack and death.
The new research findings suggest a broader approach may be necessary.
"Treating psychological factors on their own might not be the best way," Dr. Hamer said. "We're suggesting that you might have to intervene in the more intermediate pathways, which is the behavior, in addition to trying to treat the psychological problems."
For the new study, researchers recruited 6,576 men and women who were participating in the Scottish Health Survey, a population-based study involving a typical group of people living in Scotland.
At the beginning of the study, participants completed a 12-item standardised questionnaire designed to measure their general happiness, symptoms of depression or anxiety, and any recent sleep disturbances. Those with a score of 4 or moreapproximately 15 per cent of those participating in the studywere considered to be suffering from psychological distress.
At the same time a nurse took a blood sample that was later tested for common physical risk factors for heart disease, such as cholesterol and C-reactive protein (CRP), a marker of arterial inflammation.
Researchers also collected information on height, weight, physical activity, alcohol intake and smoking, and had access to each participant's medical history, including information on blood pressure.
Researchers followed-up study participants for an average of more than 7 years, using hospital records to document death from heart disease, as well as the rate of heart attack, stroke, cardiac bypass surgery and coronary interventions, such as angioplasty. Over that time, there were a total of 223 such cardiovascular "events," including 63 deaths.
Researchers found a significant and direct link between increasing psychological distress and increasing risk of cardiovascular illness and death. In fact, after age and sex were taken into account, people with depression and anxiety faced more than a 50 per cent increased risk when compared to happier people.
However, when the researchers included unhealthy behaviors in the analysis, they found that smoking and physical inactivity alone explained approximately 63 per cent of the increased cardiovascular risk. (Smoking had the greatest impact, accounting for nearly 41 per cent of the risk.) Alcohol intake explained less than 2 per cent of the risk, while high blood pressure explained 13 per cent and CRP explained just under 6 per cent.
"This study helps us to better understand the relative contributions of stress-related changes in behavior and physiology leading to heart disease," said Roland von Känel, a professor of medicine and psychiatry, and head of the psychocardiology unit of the Swiss Cardiovascular Centre at the University Hospital of Bern, Switzerland.
Dr. von Känel did not participate in the study but was invited to write an editorial comment in the same issue of JACC.
"From a public health perspective, the findings encourage us to emphasize broad preventive strategies to target the behavioral and physiological pathways leading from stress to cardiovascular disease," he said.
"These may span from behavioral interventions targeting smoking cessation and increasing physical activity, to stress management and relaxation techniques previously shown to restore cardiovascular function and to reduce inflammation. Whether such interventions ultimately decrease the cardiovascular risk associated with psychological distress needs further study."