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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (
angina
)
21,142
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Psychosocial factors affect the development of coronary heart disease and morbidity and mortality of patients with known coronary heart disease. A prior study has shown that psychological distress in patients with known coronary heart disease increased medical and economic costs. This study examined the effects of commonly available psychological interventions offered to patients entering cardiac rehabilitation after hospitalization for
angina
, myocardial infarction, angioplasty, or coronary artery bypass grafting. A total of 380 patients were screened with the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R). Those with T-scores > or = 63 (> or = 91 percentile) on the General Severity Index (GSI) subscale were randomly assigned to usual care or special intervention. Special intervention included a psychiatric evaluation, plus one to seven sessions of behavioral therapy. The percentage of patients rehospitalized for cardiac symptoms within 12 months of psychological evaluation was 43% for special intervention and 40% for usual care (NS). A correction for crossover between the treatment groups resulted in a favorable trend toward intervention, with 35% of the psychologically treated patients rehospitalized vs. 48% of the untreated patients (NS). Although there was a nonsignificant reduction of the
SCL
-90-R's GSI T-score, the depression score was significantly reduced in the special intervention group.
...
PMID:Effect of intervention for psychological distress on rehospitalization rates in cardiac rehabilitation patients. 958 39
Increasing evidence supports an association between symptomatic depression and the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD), although no single study has compared multiple depression scales. We hypothesized that higher levels of symptomatic depression assessed from different depression scales were associated with the risk of CHD. We examined this relation in the Normative Aging Study, a prospective cohort of older men. A total of 1,305 men free of diagnosed CHD in 1986 completed the revised Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI-2). We categorized scores for the MMPI-2 D, MMPI-2 DEP, and Symptom Checklist-90 (SCL-90) depression scales. During an average 7.0 years of follow-up, 110 cases of incident CHD occurred, including 30 cases of nonfatal myocardial infarction, 20 cases of fatal CHD, and 60 cases of
angina pectoris
. Compared with men reporting the lowest level of depression, men in the highest level of depression had multivariate-adjusted relative risks of incident CHD (total CHD and
angina
) of 1.46 (95% confidence interval 0.83 to 2.57), 2.07 (95% confidence interval 1.13 to 3.81), and 1.73 (95% confidence interval 0.97 to 3.10) for the MMPI-2 D, MMPI-2 DEP, and
SCL
-90 scales, respectively. Similar RRs were obtained for each CHD subtype according to each depression scale. We found strong dose-response relations between level of depression measured by the MMPI-2 DEP scale and incidence of both
angina pectoris
(p value for trend, 0.039) and CHD (p value for trend, 0.016). Among older men, symptomatic depression measured by any of 3 depression scales may be positively associated with the risk of CHD.
...
PMID:Depression and the risk of coronary heart disease in the Normative Aging Study. 978 66
In these studies patients with first myocardial infarction (MI) were selected for studies focusing on epidemiology, risk factors and treatment of depression post-MI. Two consecutive cohorts of first MI patients were included. The first cohort was selected between May 1994 and May 1997 (n = 206), and the second between May 1997 and October 1999 (n = 206). All patients were screened every 3 months for depression using the
SCL
-90 and the Zung (cohort 1) or
SCL
-90, BDI and HADS (cohort 2) until 12 months post-MI. Patients scoring above the cut-off of one of the questionnaires were interviewed using a standardised interview in order to evaluate whether DSM-IV criteria for major depression were met; patients of the second cohort were also interviewed 1 month post-MI, independently of the score of the questionnaires. Of both cohorts data concerning major cardiac events and increased health care consumption were assessed during a 1 to 6 years follow-up period. Patients with major depression were offered treatment in the double-blind placebo-controlled trial with fluoxetine (n = 54). Depression appeared to be a predictor of increased health care consumption, but not of major cardiac events such as cardiac death and recurrent infarction in first myocardial infarction (MI) patients up to 6 years post-MI. This finding is in contrast to findings in the literature indicating that in patient populations with mixed first and recurrent MI, depression is a risk factor for cardiac mortality. In contrast to depression, symptoms of anxiety do predict cardiac mortality and recurrent MI in patients following first MI independently of other risk factors of cardiac mortality. Recognition of risk factors for post-MI depression may help the cardiologist to identify patients at risk for depression. Examples of such risk factors are, according to our studies, complications during admission, such as arrhythmic disorders and recurrent
angina pectoris
, and prescription of benzodiazepines. Patients at risk can be screened for depression using a 4-item questionnaire, and, if scoring is positive, be referred for psychiatric evaluation. Although the effectivity of antidepressive treatment in MI patients has as yet not been proven, we found that fluoxetine is a cardiac-safe antidepressive agent, but only in mild depression more effective than placebo. The positive effect of antidepressive treatment on cardiac prognosis has as yet not been shown.
...
PMID:[Depression after first myocardial infarction. A prospective study on incidence, prognosis, risk factors and treatment]. 1286 52