How Does Your Family History Affect Your Health? Palatka FL

Heart disease and depression share a circular relationship: In some cases, heart disease can bring about depression, with an estimated one in six heart-attack sufferers facing clinical depression after the event, which can increase their mortality rate to 17 percent. In other cases, depression has been linked to a higher likelihood of cardiovascular disease. One of the most recent studies, conducted jointly by the Washington University School of Medicine and the Veterans Administration, suggests that developing depression symptoms is a greater predictor for heart disease than family history.

Gurinsky Joseph Md
(954) 587-5010
401 NW 42nd Ave
Plantation, FL
Billingsley E Bruce Msw Lcsw
(813) 654-8916
1210 Millennium Pkwy Ste 1030
Brandon, FL
Smallwood-Luckner Catherine E Ms Lmhc
(941) 925-8093
1229 S Tamiami Trl
Sarasota, FL
Frankel Jay PhD
(305) 362-8326
6713 Main St
Hialeah, FL
Center For Personal & Family Development
(850) 916-3770
1118 Gulf Breeze Pkwy
Gulf Breeze, FL
Grieco Alan PhD
(407) 740-6838
2737 W Fairbanks Ave
Winter Park, FL
Prieto Marta M Ms Lmhc
(561) 963-8776
1499 Forest Hill Blvd
West Palm Beach, FL
Ceros-Livingston Patsy Phd Pa
(954) 523-1009
1600 W State Road 84
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Brevard Psychology & Learning Center
(321) 723-2330
729 S Apollo Blvd
Melbourne, FL
Kolitz Brent P Phd /Licensed Psychologist
(305) 670-2284
9350 S Dixie Hwy
Miami, FL
Data Provided by:
 

How Does Your Family History Affect Your Health?

Heart disease and depression share a circular relationship: In some cases, heart disease can bring about depression, with an estimated one in six heart-attack sufferers facing clinical depression after the event, which can increase their mortality rate to 17 percent. In other cases, depression has been linked to a higher likelihood of cardiovascular disease. One of the most recent studies, conducted jointly by the Washington University School of Medicine and the Veterans Administration, suggests that developing depression symptoms is a greater predictor for heart disease than family history.

The study, published at the annual meeting of the American Psychosomatic Meeting in Chicago in the beginning of March, was based on data compiled from more than 1,200 male twins who served in the Vietnam War. The men were interviewed in 1992 and again in 2005. Researchers found that the participants who reported that they suffered from depression in 1992 were twice as likely as their non-depressed peers to develop heart disease in the years leading up to the second interview.

Interestingly, a long-held assumption that depression is a contributing factor to hypertension has been recently challenged by researchers at VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam. Their findings, published in an online version of Hypertension at the end of February, suggest that depression is actually linked to low blood pressure, and tricyclic antidepressants, such as imipramine, are in fact responsible for raising blood pressure. According the National Institute of Mental Health, however, this class of antidepressants has been eclipsed in recent years by selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) such as Prozac and serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) like Effexor. But another study published in the March 17 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology found that sudden cardiac death might be associated with the use of antidepressants, though the researchers caution that they weren’t sure if the link was due to the medications or the depression they were treating...

Click here to read more from Quality Health