Health & Medicine - Posted by Karen Finney-UC Davis on Wednesday, October 31, 2012 15:09 - 5 Comments    
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After heart failure, treat depression, too

Treating depression in heart failure patients can improve physical health, a recent study finds. "Researchers and practitioners increasingly recognize that the mind and the body have powerful connections, which is promising since they have been segregated for years," says Wei Jiang of Duke University. (Credit: iStockphoto)

UC DAVIS / DUKE (US) — Controlling depression in patients with heart failure improves health status, social functioning, and quality of life, research shows.


Heart failure causes the heart’s pumping action to become progressively weak and, even with advanced treatments, is associated with increased disability and mortality. The estimated direct and indirect costs of the disease in the US are more than $37 billion. The condition affects more than 5 million Americans, about 20 percent of whom are also diagnosed with depression.

While depression is known to worsen a variety of diseases, the current study published online in the journal Circulation: Heart Failure is one of the first to show that reducing symptoms of the mental health condition can benefit physical health.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.112.967620

“The improved endurance measurements were especially striking,” says lead author Glen Xiong, associate clinical professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at University of California, Davis.

“I think clinicians will be more motivated to both screen and treat depressive symptoms in people with heart failure because of the significant functional improvements.”

For the study, Xiong conducted a secondary analysis on data obtained from the 2008 Sertraline Against Depression and Heart Disease in Chronic Heart Failure (SADHART-CHF) study that evaluated the efficacy of the antidepressant medication sertraline in reducing depressive and cardiac symptoms among 469 men and women 45 years of age or older with both heart failure and major depressive disorder.

Sertraline is from a class of medications called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors that can help balance brain chemicals linked with panic disorder and depression. The initial SADHART-CHF results found that sertraline treatment, however, did not significantly differ from placebo in reducing depressive symptoms.

The current study focused on participants’ depression and health status, independent of sertraline.

“We wanted to dig deeper into the health effects in patients whose depression improved over the study period, regardless of their medication use,” Xiong says.

Researchers used data from rigorous, standardized evaluations administered over the course of the 12-week SADHART-CHF study to measure both depression and general health. The Hamilton Depression Rating Scale questionnaire was administered periodically to all study participants to assess the severity of depressive symptoms.

Cardiac and general health were determined using the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire and the Short Form Health Survey (completed by 285 study participants) and a six-minute walk test (completed by 378 participants).

Tip of the iceberg

Participants whose depression remitted during the trial intervention had improvement on scores of physical health on a variety of measures, including social limitation, physical limitation, quality of life, symptom frequency, and total symptoms.

“To put the results in perspective, a five-point change in the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire is clinically significant,” says Xiong. “The patients whose depression was in remission had scores 13 points higher than those who were not in remission.”

Those outcomes were backed up by the Short Form Health Survey, which showed that reduced depression symptoms also improved physical function and general health perception. The six-minute walk test also showed significant improvements in endurance, as patients with reduced depression could walk on average 47 meters—or about 154 feet—farther than their counterparts with major depression.

The results open up a new avenue of investigation that could lead to therapies that leverage the connections between the mind and the body and help heart-failure patients stabilize their condition.

“Our new study is just the tip of the iceberg, since the relationship between the body and mind is extremely complex,” says Wei Jiang, senior author of the study and director of the Neuropsychocardiology Laboratory at Duke University Medical Center.

“Researchers and practitioners increasingly recognize that the mind and the body have powerful connections, which is promising since they have been segregated for years,” Jiang adds.

“This kind of interdisciplinary research can help find answers to how physical health affects mental health, and vice versa, and inform the development of clinical practices that recognize this approach.”

Xiong and Jiang recommend further research to delineate why some patients respond to depression medications while others don’t.

“There may be underlying genetic or other physiological differences, such as inflammatory markers, that alter the opportunities for treatments to work optimally,” Xiong says.

“Knowing that relieving depression can be accompanied by broad physical health benefits, we want to be able to identify ways to make treatment modalities as helpful as possible for as many people as possible, especially for those with serious heart disease.”

The National Institute of Mental Health funded the study.

Source UC Davis

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5 Comments

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Stephen in Miami
Oct 31, 2012 18:07

The results of this study make perfect sense. Depression can be a tough thing to recover from, and this can drag even the healthiest of people down. As you say, depression can affect multiple aspects of a person’s life, and overcoming it can drastically improve their quality of life. In a related note, I recently read about how harmful anxiety can be for patients recovering from their breast cancer treatment regimen. Maintaining a positive attitude is crucial to maintaining a healthier lifestyle.

Kathleen Winfrey
Nov 2, 2012 0:56

I agree that controlling depression in patients with heart failure will improve its health status because depression can affect the whole well being of a person. Now, when depression is controlled he can live happily and can improve his/her quality of life.

DD Galloway
Nov 30, 2012 12:04

“Researchers and practitioners increasingly recognize that the mind and the body have powerful connections…” – this is very important. We have all heard stories of how positive thinking has healed people…it can be very powerful…and the opposite is also a big concern. This research is important …but also a problem are the negative side affects of the drug.

Steve in Alabama
Dec 6, 2012 0:58

I think that this study highlights an interesting point of view. This seems to invoke a sense of holistic treatment here. As in we shouldn’t be looking to treat just the disease itself, but also the person (mind and spirit). I believe that this is very important research, and that it could certainly help how some patients are treated. Depression certainly can be a tough thing to recover from, especially when that patient is left to deal with it on their own.

AvailFlorida
Feb 4, 2013 21:45

Depression certainly can be a difficult thing to recover from, especially when just starting out. I had suffered from depression for a period of time while my family was experiencing financial issues. During that period, I spent some time researching the symptoms of depression. Luckily, I found a few really great resources which were quite helpful to me. However, it was difficult for me to sleep during this time. Most nights, I would find myself awake well past 2 a.m.

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