| March 9, 2009
WebMD Health News
Heart Disease Tied to Depression, Anger
Chronic Anger, Hostility, or Major Depression May Increase
Likelihood of Heart Disease, New Studies Show
By Miranda Hitti
Depression, anger, and hostility may
be red flags of heightened heart disease risk, even if you don't
have heart disease right now.
That news comes from two studies published in the March 17 edition
of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
Highlights from the studies include:
Depression and heart disease: Sudden cardiac death
may be more than twice as common among women with symptoms of major
depression than women who aren't depressed. This finding comes from
a study of more than 63,000 U.S. female nurses followed from 1992
to 2004. The nurses had no history of heart disease when the study
started. The study also linked sudden cardiac death to antidepressant
use, but it's not clear if that's related to the drugs or the depression.
Anger/hostility and heart disease: Chronically
angry or hostile adults with no history of heart disease may be
19% more likely than their peers to develop heart disease. And angry
or hostile heart disease patients may be 24% more likely than other
heart disease patients to have a poor prognosis. These findings
came from reviewers who pooled data from 44 studies conducted in
America, Europe, Asia, and Australia between 1983 and 2006.
The reports don't prove that depression, anger, or hostility caused
heart disease. But the findings held regardless of other heart disease
risk factors, suggesting a stubborn link among those traits.
It's a connection that doctors and patients need to take seriously
and talk about, heart experts tell WebMD.
Heart Disease, Depression, Anger
"There is clearly a link between depression, anger, anxiety,
stress, and outcomes in heart disease," says Philip Binkley,
Wilson professor of medicine at The Ohio State University's division
of cardiovascular medicine.
The new reports underscore that link, notes Redford Williams, MD,
director of the Behavioral Medicine Research Center at Duke University.
"What these papers tell us is what we have all known and anybody
would accept -- that being hostile and angry a lot of the time is
bad for your health, being depressed is bad for your health,"
Williams says.
Williams tells WebMD that he "absolutely" considers chronic
anger, hostility, or depression to be risk factors for heart disease,
just like high blood pressure (hypertension), smoking, or high cholesterol.
Based on the new reports and previous research, "I think you
pretty well have to conclude that yes indeed, these are risk factors,"
Williams says.
Binkley agrees.
"The biggest message that we try to get out to people is this
is a risk factor and a health problem," Binkley says. "This
is something we have to talk about. The worst thing is to ignore
it."
Cardiologist Pamela Douglas, MD, Geller Professor of Medicine at
Duke University, also sees a strong link between depression and
heart disease -- but she stops short of calling depression a risk
factor for heart disease. She says it's not clear which comes first,
depression or heart disease. "It's sort of a chicken-or-the-egg
issue," Douglas says.
All three experts agree that other heart disease risk factors often
accompany depression -- and it never hurts to screen for heart hazards.
And if you already know you have heart disease, you should be screened
for depression, according to guidelines set in September 2008 by
the American Heart Association.
What About Antidepressants?
As noted earlier, the new report on depression and heart disease
showed a possible link between antidepressant use and the risk of
sudden cardiac death.
Those findings raise more questions than they answer.
"The question is, is that just because the antidepressants
were a sign of a more severe depression or was it a result of something
about the antidepressants themselves?" Williams asks.
Williams notes that some antidepressants, called tricyclic antidepressants,
are known to have possible effects on cardiac arrhythmias. But the
new report doesn't show what kind of antidepressants the patients
were taking or other details about their antidepressant use.
"It could be that the drug itself was contributing to the
risk of sudden cardiac death in patients who were depressed ...
but my guess would be that it's probably, if anything, a function
of the severity of the depression," Williams says.
Binkley says that people taking antidepressants shouldn't jump
to conclusions. "We need to collect much more information.
This is one study," says Binkley.
Douglas agrees that the antidepressant findings aren't totally
clear. But she says, "Don't take 'em if you don't need 'em."
Does Treatment Help?
Douglas and Binkley say studies haven't proven that treating depression
(or hostility and anger) eases heart disease.
"We don't have much information on that," Douglas says.
"That's still something we need to learn much more about,"
Binkley says.
But Williams says a program he and his wife, Virginia Williams,
PhD, have developed has been shown to lower blood pressure, depression,
hostility, and anger.
Williams says the strategy, which is the basis of a company called
Williams LifeSkills Inc. that he and Virginia formed and have a
financial interest in, boils down to this:
When you're in a situation that triggers anger, sadness, or anxiety,
ask yourself these four questions: Is this important? Am I having
an appropriate reaction? Is this situation modifiable (can I do
anything about it)? Is it worth it to me to do something about it?
"A 'no' to any of those four questions means ... change your
reaction [to the situation]," says Williams. He suggests self-talk,
breathing exercises, prayer, or whatever else it takes to shift
your reaction.
But if you answer "yes" to all four questions, then it's
time to be appropriately assertive, which Williams says means describing
the problematic behavior, explaining how you feel, requesting change,
and, if all that fails, setting reasonable consequences.
Williams also recommends focusing on damage prevention by improving
communication and relationships.
That includes speaking clearly, listening well (not interrupting,
acting interested in what the speaker is saying, recapping their
main points when they're done, and being prepared to be changed
by what you hear), showing empathy, and looking for opportunities
to make your interactions with other people more positive (such
as by paying compliments and being a good listener.)
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