Depression and cardiovascular disease: a clinical review
University of Melbourne · Austin Health · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) and depression are common. Patients with CVD have more depression than the general population. Persons with depression are more likely to eventually develop CVD and also have a higher mortality rate than the general population. Patients with CVD, who are also depressed, have a worse outcome than those patients who are not depressed. There is a graded relationship: the more severe the depression, the higher the subsequent risk of mortality and other cardiovascular events. It is possible that depression is only a marker for more severe CVD which so far cannot be detected using our currently available investigations. However, given the increased prevalence of depression in patients…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 115
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Depression (economics)
- Disease
- Management of depression
- Population
- Quality of life (healthcare)
- Antidepressant
- Intensive care medicine
- Good health and well-being