Patients with Severe
Psychiatric Illness at Higher Heart Disease Risk
(October 17, 2007) -- Washington, (ANI): A new study has revealed that
patients with severe psychiatric illness such as
schizophrenia,
bipolar disorder and
major depression are at a higher risk of developing cardiovascular
diseases.
The study relied on data from a national study of 1,500 patients with
chronic schizophrenia who participated in the National Institute of Mental
Health-funded Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE)
study.
John W. Newcomer, M.D., professor of psychiatry, of psychology and of
medicine and medical director of the Center for Clinical Studies at
Washington University, said that those with such illnesses lose 25 to 30
years of life expectancy compared to the general population.
"This is really a double hit. Not only are these patients dealing with
the serious burden that accompanies their
psychiatric disorder, but they also have an increased risk and an
increased burden from major medical conditions like diabetes, heart disease
and stroke. Ultimately, it is the unrecognised risk factors and the
under-diagnosed and under-treated conditions that significantly shorten the
lifespan," Newcomer said.
He said that several factors conspire to elevate risk including reduced
access to
appropriate medical care.
Major mental disorders significantly impair a person's ability to work
and learn, so patients tend to have lower incomes and poorer
dietary habits, often relying instead on fast food.
In addition, patients with serious psychiatric illness are much more
likely to smoke (between 50 percent and 80 percent smoke cigarettes) and
although the severely mentally ill make up only between 5 percent and 10
percent of the population, they consume a disproportionate amount of
cigarettes.
Many
psychiatric medications also tend to contribute to weight gain, in part
by making people less active and sometimes by stimulating appetite, and
weight gain can be a prominent side effect of some
antipsychotic drugs in particular.
He also reports that patients with severe mental illness are
significantly less likely to receive therapies of proven benefit for
problems with cholesterol, diabetes, hypertension or heart disease. Those
who have survived a heart attack are less likely to receive appropriate
medications, cardiac catheterisation procedures or bypass surgery than
heart-attack patients without mental illness.
The CATIE study found that 88 percent of patients entering the study with
high cholesterol did not take lipid-lowering drugs. Another 30 percent with
diabetes at the start of the study received no anti-diabetes medications,
and 62 percent of those with high blood pressure were not taking any
antihypertensive medication.
Those with severe psychiatric illness also are less likely to be screened
for high cholesterol, high blood pressure or diabetes despite the evidence
of increased risk in general and specific evidence that some antipsychotic
drugs can have adverse effects on body weight, glucose metabolism and lipid
levels.
He also added that another problem is that lifestyle interventions that
encourage healthy eating, smoking cessation and exercise can be difficult
enough in the general population, but they are even more difficult when
patients with schizophrenia or other mental disorders are involved.
Newcomer said that to lower risk of cardiovascular complications,
psychiatrists may need to regularly weigh their patients, take blood
pressure and screen appropriately for blood glucose, cholesterol and
triglycerides.
"We're not saying psychiatrists should start prescribing lipid-lowering
agents or diabetes drugs, but they are on the 'front lines,' seeing
psychiatric patients much more than primary-care providers. It's important
that psychiatrists begin to employ some of these basic screening
techniques," Newcomer says.
He also said that it's vital that patients with severe mental
disorders receive needed psychiatric medications, even though some of those
drugs may contribute to weight gain, abnormal lipid levels and risk for
cardiovascular disease and diabetes.
He believes that if such strategies can be developed and implemented, it
is possible to quickly lower rates of cardiovascular disease and increase
life expectancy in this population.
The new study is published in the Journal of the American Medical
Association (JAMA). (ANI)
Source: ANI
Last updated: 10/07
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