Neuroticism is associated with future disease and mortality risks.

IF 7.5 3区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Shuyi Huang, Yaru Zhang, Lingzhi Ma, Bangsheng Wu, Jianfeng Feng, Wei Cheng, Jintai Yu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Neuroticism has been associated with numerous health outcomes. However, most research has focused on a single specific disorder and has produced controversial results, particularly regarding mortality risk. Here, we aimed to examine the association of neuroticism with morbidity and mortality and to elucidate how neuroticism affects trajectories from a healthy state, to one or more neuroticism-related disorders, and subsequent mortality risk.

Methods: We included 483,916 participants from the UK Biobank at baseline (2006-2010). Neuroticism was measured using the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire. Three clusters were constructed, including worry, depressed affect, and sensitivity to environmental stress and adversity (SESA). Cox proportional hazards regression and multistate models were used. Linear regression was used to examine the association between neuroticism and immune parameters and neuroimaging measures.

Results: High neuroticism was associated with 37 non-overlapping diseases, including increased risk of infectious, cardiometabolic, neuropsychiatric, digestive, respiratory diseases, and decreased risk of cancer. After adjustment for sociodemographic variables, physical measures, healthy behaviors, and baseline diagnoses, moderate-to-high neuroticism was associated with a decreased risk of all-cause mortality. In multistate models, high neuroticism was associated with an increased risk of transitions from a healthy state to a first neuroticism-related disease (hazard ratio [HR] [95% confidence interval (CI)] = 1.09 [1.05-1.13], P <0.001) and subsequent transitions to multimorbidity (1.08 [1.02-1.14], P = 0.005), but was associated with a decreased risk of transitions from multimorbidity to death (0.90 [0.84-0.97], P for trend = 0.006). The leading neuroticism cluster showing a detrimental role in the health-illness transition was depressed affect, which correlated with higher amygdala volume and lower insula volume. The protective effect of neuroticism against mortality was mainly contributed by the SESA (sensitivity to environmental stress and adversity) cluster, which, unlike the other two clusters, did not affect the balance between innate and adaptive immunity.

Conclusion: This study provides new insights into the differential role of neuroticism in health outcomes and into new perspectives for establishing mortality prevention programs for patients with multimorbidity.

背景:神经质与许多健康结果有关。然而,大多数研究都集中在单一的特定疾病上,并得出了有争议的结果,尤其是在死亡风险方面。在此,我们旨在研究神经质与发病率和死亡率的关系,并阐明神经质如何影响从健康状态到一种或多种神经质相关疾病的轨迹以及随后的死亡风险:我们纳入了英国生物库中基线(2006-2010 年)的 483,916 名参与者。神经质采用艾森克人格问卷进行测量。我们构建了三个群组,包括忧虑、抑郁情绪以及对环境压力和逆境的敏感性(SESA)。采用了 Cox 比例危险回归和多态模型。线性回归用于研究神经质与免疫参数和神经影像测量之间的关系:结果:高神经质与 37 种非重叠疾病相关,包括感染、心脏代谢、神经精神、消化和呼吸系统疾病的风险增加,以及癌症风险降低。在对社会人口变量、身体测量、健康行为和基线诊断进行调整后,中度至高度神经质与全因死亡风险的降低有关。在多态模型中,高度神经质与从健康状态转变为首次患神经质相关疾病的风险增加有关(危险比 [HR] [95% 置信区间 (CI)] = 1.09 [1.05-1.13],P 结论:这项研究为神经质在健康结果中的不同作用提供了新的见解,也为多病患者制定死亡率预防计划提供了新的视角。
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来源期刊
Chinese Medical Journal
Chinese Medical Journal 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
9.80
自引率
4.90%
发文量
19245
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: The Chinese Medical Journal (CMJ) is published semimonthly in English by the Chinese Medical Association, and is a peer reviewed general medical journal for all doctors, researchers, and health workers regardless of their medical specialty or type of employment. Established in 1887, it is the oldest medical periodical in China and is distributed worldwide. The journal functions as a window into China’s medical sciences and reflects the advances and progress in China’s medical sciences and technology. It serves the objective of international academic exchange. The journal includes Original Articles, Editorial, Review Articles, Medical Progress, Brief Reports, Case Reports, Viewpoint, Clinical Exchange, Letter,and News,etc. CMJ is abstracted or indexed in many databases including Biological Abstracts, Chemical Abstracts, Index Medicus/Medline, Science Citation Index (SCI), Current Contents, Cancerlit, Health Plan & Administration, Embase, Social Scisearch, Aidsline, Toxline, Biocommercial Abstracts, Arts and Humanities Search, Nuclear Science Abstracts, Water Resources Abstracts, Cab Abstracts, Occupation Safety & Health, etc. In 2007, the impact factor of the journal by SCI is 0.636, and the total citation is 2315.
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