Older adults with chronic depression may have more than double the risk of stroke, the danger remaining high even after depression treatment.
Chronic Depression may more than double the risk of stroke for older
adults, and the danger remains high even when mental health
improves, a large U.S. study suggests.
Counselling or medications
While previous research has linked depression
to greater odds of having a stroke, the current study offers fresh evidence that
mood-improving treatments like counselling or medications may not completely
address the stroke risk tied to psychological problems.
"When symptoms of depression go away, risk of stroke remains higher, at least
for two years," lead study author Paola Gilsanz, a researcher at Harvard T.H.
Chan School of Public Health in Boston, said by email.
Scientists still don't know if this holds true for people of all ages or
whether it matters how or why depression gets better, she added.
Strokes, a leading cause of death worldwide, occur when blood flow to the brain is interrupted. Usually, this happens because a blood
vessel bursts or gets blocked by a clot, depriving the brain of oxygen and damaging tissue.
Depression, while less deadly, affects an estimated 350 million people
globally, according to the World Health Organisation. More than half of them
never receive treatment because they aren't diagnosed or can't afford drugs.
To understand the connection between depression and stroke, Gilsanz and
colleagues reviewed 12 years of data from health interviews for 16,178 U.S.
adults age 50 and older. With interviews every two years, and an average
follow-up of almost nine years, researchers were able to monitor strokes and
changes in mental health over time.
Study variables
Participants were typically around 66 years old and most of them had few, if
any, symptoms of depression when they started the study.
During the study period, 1,192 strokes occurred. Soon after developing
depression, participants had a slightly higher risk of stroke, though the
increase might be due only to chance.
But if depression lingered over four years, the stroke risk over the
following two years was more than doubled, compared with people who hadn't shown
many signs of depression.
For people whose mood improved, the stroke risk over two years remained
similar to those who remained chronically depressed.
One limitation of the study is its reliance on participants to report strokes
and recall depression symptoms, the authors acknowledge in the Journal of
the American Heart Association. Researchers also didn't have data on the
type or severity of strokes or details on any psychiatric medications
participants might have taken.
Moreover, the study doesn't prove depression causes strokes, Gilsanz said.
It's possible that depression leads people to smoke, drink excessively, eat
poorly and exercise less – all unhealthy behaviours that could contribute
to some of the increase in stroke risk.
Changes in the nervous system
Depression might also cause biological changes such as inflammation that can
elevate stroke risk, Gilsanz said.
At the same time, it's possible that depression produces changes in the nervous system that lead to an overproduction of the stress hormone cortisol, said Dr. Olajide Williams, director
of acute stroke services at Columbia University Medical Centre in New York City.
Excess cortisol can narrow the blood vessels and raise blood
pressure.
When depression is diagnosed, patients can make lifestyle changes and get
treatment for inflammation or high blood pressure that might minimise their risk of stroke,
said Williams, who is also a spokesman for the American Heart
Association.
In particular, exercise can help ease depression and also improve cardiovascular health, he said.
"Depression is under-detected and under-treated," Williams said. "This study
highlights the need to focus more attention on diagnosis because beyond the
mental debilitation there may also be a very serious physical danger."
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