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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of social support variables, personality, clinical variables (New York Heart Associations classification), and social disability upon depression. The sample consisted of 119 clinically stable patients (34 females, 85 males) with symptomatic
heart failure
, recruited from an outpatient hospital practice. The patients underwent a brief physical examination and completed a set of questionnaires. Descriptive statistics were used to characterise the patients' informal functional network. The analysis revealed that the intimate social network support (spouses) and primary social network support (close family) were rated as most supportive. Results from the path analysis showed that social disability was explained by the two personality factors,
neuroticism
and extraversion, and by the severity of disease (NYHA). No significant effects of the social support variables upon social disability were detected. Moreover, path-analyses showed that poor intimate network support, social disability and
neuroticism
were significantly positively associated with depression.
...
PMID:Social support, social disability and their role as predictors of depression among patients with congestive heart failure. 965 6
In this study, insomnia in 80-year-olds was related to medical, psychological and social factors. The data were based on examinations every year in people aged between 80 and 89 years. Of 333 people living in the city of Lund and born in 1908, 67% participated. Increased severity of insomnia was significantly associated with use of diuretics, other cardiovascular drugs, hypnotics and laxatives, and with nervousness, difficulty relaxing, anorexia, nausea, constipation, backache, feeling cold, sweating, loss of weight, dizziness, depression, general fatigue, exhaustion, angina pectoris,
cardiac insufficiency
, worsened objective and subjective health, presence of negative T-waves on ECG, anxiety, total life satisfaction,
neuroticism
, disbelief in a just world, feeling lonely and lower survival rates. Thus insomnia has widespread associations with different aspects of life in 80-year-olds.
...
PMID:Insomnia in an 80-year-old population: relationship to medical, psychological and social factors. 978 73
Congestive heart failure is a major cause of morbidity and mortality within the Western world, and yet psychosocial impact of this disease is under-researched. The aim of this study was to evaluate the possible effects of social relationships (perceived social support and perceived social isolation) on mortality risk in 119 patients with stable, symptomatic congestive heart failure. Fifty-one deaths were registered during the six-year follow-up period, all from cardiac causes. Analysis using proportional hazard models indicated that social isolation was a significant predictor of mortality (relative risk, 1.36; confidence interval, 1.04 to 1.78; p < 0.03), controlling for
neuroticism
,
heart failure
severity, functional status, gender, and age. The small sample size was a limitation of the study; therefore, further research is required in order to confirm these findings and to illuminate the mechanisms behind the relationships between social isolation and mortality.
...
PMID:Long-term effect of social relationships on mortality in patients with congestive heart failure. 1566 56
Elderly patients with somatic illness are at increased risk of depression. The authors studied the prevalence and persistence of depressive symptoms during the first year after the events of myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, fall-related injury, and the diagnosis of cancer and their putative pre-event risk factors. The GLAS study contains data from 614 patients who experienced post-baseline myocardial infarction, cancer,
heart failure
, or fall-related injury of the extremities within 5 years after the baseline assessment. Follow-up was conducted 8 weeks, 6 months, and 1 year after the somatic event. The authors studied the relative importance of 21 baseline risk factors for experiencing significant depressive symptoms during follow-up and the persistence of depression. Depressive symptoms were prevalent in 38.3% of the subjects during the post-event year; in about 19.1%, symptoms were mild. For a majority of patients (67.5%), symptoms persisted until the next assessment. Significant pre-event risk factors were depressive symptoms at baseline, age, smoking, poor general health, poor well-being, and
neuroticism
. Within the depressed group, only
neuroticism
was related to the persistence of symptoms.
Neuroticism
increases the risk of experiencing post-event depressive symptoms and is related to their persistence, which suggests the existence of a depression-prone personality.
...
PMID:Depressive symptoms in elderly patients after a somatic illness event: prevalence, persistence, and risk factors. 1638 5
Recent evidence suggests that psychosocial factors such as self-efficacy, psychological distress, perceived social support, and marital quality have prognostic significance for morbidity and mortality after
heart failure
. Previously, we reported that interview and observational measures of marital quality obtained from 189 patients with
heart failure
(139 men and 50 women) and their spouses predicted all-cause patient mortality during the next 4 years, independent of the baseline illness severity (New York Heart Association class). We present additional follow-up results for this sample, with Cox regression analyses showing that a couple-level composite measure of marital quality continued to predict survival during an 8-year period (p <0.001), especially when the patient was a woman, and did so substantially better than individual (patient-level) risk and protective factors, such as psychological distress, hostility,
neuroticism
, self-efficacy, optimism, and breadth of perceived emotional support. In conclusion, relationship factors may be especially relevant in managing a difficult chronic condition such as
heart failure
, which makes stringent and complex demands on patients and their families.
...
PMID:Effect of marital quality on eight-year survival of patients with heart failure. 1702 73