Association of depression with reduced heart rate variability in coronary artery disease.
@article{Carney1995AssociationOD, title={Association of depression with reduced heart rate variability in coronary artery disease.}, author={Robert M. Carney and Roger D. Saunders and Kenneth E. Freedland and Phyllis K. Stein and Michael W. Rich and Allan S. Jaffe}, journal={The American journal of cardiology}, year={1995}, volume={76 8}, pages={ 562-4 } }
Decreased heart rate (HR) variability is an independent risk factor for mortality in cardiac populations. Clinical depression has also been associated with adverse outcomes in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). This study tests the hypothesis that depressed patients with CAD have decreased HR variability compared with nondepressed CAD patients. Nineteen patients with angiographically documented CAD and either major or minor depression were compared with a sample of nondepressed CAD…
263 Citations
Depression and Cardiac Function in Patients With Stable Coronary Heart Disease: Findings From the Heart and Soul Study
- Medicine, PsychologyPsychosomatic medicine
- 2008
Overall, there is little evidence that depression is associated with worse cardiac disease severity, which suggests that greater baseline heart disease severity is unlikely to be responsible for the increased risk of CHD events in depressed patients.
Severe depression is associated with markedly reduced heart rate variability in patients with stable coronary heart disease.
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of psychosomatic research
- 2000
Depression and anxiety as predictors of heart rate variability after myocardial infarction
- Psychology, MedicinePsychological Medicine
- 2007
Clinical anxiety, but not depression, negatively influenced parasympathetic modulation of heart rate in post- MI patients, elucidate the physiological mechanisms underlying anxiety as a risk factor for adverse outcomes, but also raises questions about the potential role of HRV as an intermediary between depression and post-MI prognosis.
Depressive symptoms and heart rate variability in postmenopausal women.
- Medicine, PsychologyArchives of internal medicine
- 2005
Heart Rate Variability in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease: Differences in Patients with Higher and Lower Depression Scores
- Medicine, PsychologyPsychosomatic medicine
- 1997
Those with higher depression scores had lower heart rate variability during daily life in comparison to the lower depression score group, and these findings may be related to the reported relationship between depression and survival risk in patients with coronary artery disease.
Depressed Mood, Positive Affect, and Heart Rate Variability in Patients With Suspected Coronary Artery Disease
- MedicinePsychosomatic medicine
- 2008
Relationships between depression and HRV in patients with CAD may depend on affective experience over the monitoring period, and Enhanced parasympathetic cardiac control may be a process through which positive affect protects against cardiovascular disease.
Depression and heart rate variability in patients with coronary heart disease
- Medicine, PsychologyCleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine
- 2009
It is concluded that low heart rate variability (HRV) may account for a substantial part of the risk associated with depression in CHD.
Depression and heart rate variability in patients with stable coronary heart disease: findings from the Heart and Soul Study.
- Psychology, MedicineArchives of general psychiatry
- 2005
No evidence of an association between depression and HRV is found in 873 outpatients with stable CHD, raising questions about the potential role of HRV in the association between depressed patients and cardiovascular disease.
Depression and cardiac mortality: results from a community-based longitudinal study.
- Medicine, PsychologyArchives of general psychiatry
- 2001
Depression increases the risk for cardiac mortality in subjects with and without cardiac disease at baseline, and the excess cardiac mortality risk was more than twice as high for major depression as for minor depression.
Autonomic dysfunction: a link between depression and cardiovascular mortality? The FINE Study
- Medicine, PsychologyEuropean journal of cardiovascular prevention and rehabilitation : official journal of the European Society of Cardiology, Working Groups on Epidemiology & Prevention and Cardiac Rehabilitation and Exercise Physiology
- 2007
It is suggested that mild depressive symptoms are associated with autonomic dysfunction in elderly men, and the increased risk of cardiovascular mortality with increasing magnitude of depressive symptoms could, however, not be explained by autonomic Dysfunction.
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 21 REFERENCES
Significance of depression and cognitive impairment in patients undergoing programed stimulation of cardiac arrhythmias.
- Medicine, PsychologyPsychosomatic medicine
- 1987
The data suggest that arrhythmia morbidity and mortality may in part be a function of cognitive and emotional impairments that lessen the individual's capacity to comply with lifesaving therapy, maintain a stable physiologic milieu, and continue an adaptive emotional life.
Biobehavioral variables and mortality or cardiac arrest in the Cardiac Arrhythmia Pilot Study (CAPS).
- Psychology, MedicineThe American journal of cardiology
- 1990
Are affective disorders associated with alterations of heart rate variability?
- Psychology, MedicineJournal of affective disorders
- 1994
RR variability in healthy, middle-aged persons compared with patients with chronic coronary heart disease or recent acute myocardial infarction.
- MedicineCirculation
- 1995
Values of RR variability previously reported to predict death in patients with known chronic coronary heart disease are rarely found in healthy middle-aged individuals and should be rare when measures ofRR variability are used to screen groups of middle- aged persons to identify individuals who have substantial risk of coronary deaths or arrhythmic events.
Affective disorders and survival after acute myocardial infarction. Results from the post-infarction late potential study.
- Medicine, PsychologyEuropean heart journal
- 1991
The findings indicate that affective disorders play an important role in the post-acute phase after AMI although the extent of myocardial infarction and behaviour responses are not significantly related to one another.
Perspectives on the relationship between cardiovascular disease and affective disorder.
- Medicine, PsychologyThe Journal of clinical psychiatry
- 1990
Preliminary data are presented which may suggest a mechanism to explain, in part, this increased rate of cardiovascular death in depression.
Autonomic functioning and cigarette smoking: Heart rate spectral analysis
- Medicine, BiologyBiological Psychiatry
- 1992
Jaffc AS . Depression is associafcd with pwr adherence to medical treatment regimen in elderly cardiac patients
- Hn ~ lrh Psycho /
- 1995
Eckberg KI . , Sprcnkle JM Low dose armpine reduces ventricullu vulnerability in normal and ischemic hearts ( abstr )
- J C / in Invest IYX
- 1994
Depreswd affcc[. hopelessness. and the risk of ischemic heart disase in a cohort of 1J.S. adulfs
- Epidmklogy
- 1993