| |
|
|||||||
|
Apocalypse Suicide
Page
HealthyPlace.com Radio
Books on
Depression
Abuse
|
Heart Attack Depression 'Is Not Normal'(October 12, 2006) - People who are depressed after a heart attack fare worse than those who don't suffer from a bout of depression, even if their symptoms are only temporary, a new study shows. It's crucial for patients, their loved ones and their doctors to understand that being depressed after a heart attack isn't "normal," and shouldn't be ignored, Dr. Susmita Parashar of the Emory School of Medicine in Atlanta, the study's lead author, told Reuters Health. "Depressive symptoms, whether they are transient, persistent, or new, are actually more consistently associated with worse outcomes compared with traditional measures of disease severity," Parashar added in an interview. About one in five people who have a heart attack suffer from depression while hospitalised or in the first year following their heart attack, the researchers point out in the Archives of Internal Medicine. But many people, including physicians, see this as a normal reaction to a serious illness, and there is a perception that transient depression will have no lasting effect on a patient's health. To investigate, Parashar's group looked at how 1,873 patients fared six months after having a heart attack. During hospitalisation, 20.6 per cent experienced moderate to severe depression, while 13.1 per cent were depressed one month after hospital discharge. Seven per cent of patients were depressed at both time points, and were classified as having persistent depression, while 13.5 per cent were only depressed in the hospital (transient depression) and 6 per cent became depressed for the first time after hospital discharge (new depression). At six months, all of the depressed patients were more likely to have been re-hospitalised or to have died than the 73.5 per cent of patients who reported no depression. The depressed patients also experienced more chest pain, more disability, and worse quality of life. In fact, the researchers found, depression was a better predictor of patient outcome than traditionally used measures such as left ventricular ejection fraction - a gauge of the heart's pumping power - or a patient's past history of heart attack. Future research is needed, Parashar said, to determine if treating depression in heart attack patients can help improve outcome.
Source: Reuters Last updated: 10/06 Related Storiess
top ~ news index ~ send to friend HealthyPlace.com Depression Center Links home ~ site map ~ causes ~ types ~ people ~ living with treatments ~ self-help ~ support ~ suicide ~ related issues |
advertisement |
||||||
| HealthyPlace.com Homepage We subscribe to the HONcode principles of the Health On the Net Foundation. © 2000-2006 HealthyPlace.com, Inc. All
rights reserved. |
||||||||