The mediating role of thyroid hormone in the association between heatwave exposure and depression severity

IF 10.3 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Jingxiao Shang , Jiayu Xu , Tianqin Xie , John S. Ji , Xiaoming Tang , Jing Wang , Ting Wang , Yuewei Liu , Daomin Zhu , Cunrui Huang
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Abstract

High-temperature exposure has been reported to be associated with depression scores and the risk of hospital visits. However, how heatwaves affect depression severity and the underlying mechanisms remains unclear. Inpatients with depression from the Anhui Mental Health Center in China between January 2020 and December 2023 were included in this retrospective study. The patients were grouped into mild, moderate and severe depression categories according to discharge diagnoses. The effects of heatwaves in two weeks prior to admission on depression severity were assessed based on mixed-effect logistic regression model, and the roles of thyroid hormones were quantified by piecewise structural equation modeling. Stratified analyses were conducted by gender, age, BMI and the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 5,978 inpatients with depression were hospitalized 7,118 times during the study period. The depression severity escalated with the threshold and duration of heatwaves. The risk of more severe depression during heatwave exposure (≥95th percentile, ≥3 days) was 12.4 % (95 % CI: 6.1 %, 19 %) higher compared to non-heatwave conditions. The proportions of mediating effects of thyroid hormones (T3, FT3, T4 and the FT4/FT3 ratio) were 7.7 % (95 % CI: 0.3 %, 20.1 %), 13.6 % (95 % CI: 1.5 %, 30.6 %), 12.8 % (95 % CI: 4.3 %, 25.7 %) and 23.3 % (95 % CI: 11.4 %, 54.1 %) in the influences of heatwaves on depression severity, respectively. Males, young and middle-aged patients, overweight patients, and those hospitalized during the COVID-19 pandemic, were all more sensitive to heatwaves. Our study showed that heatwaves significantly correlated with depression severity. Thyroid hormones may played potential mediating roles in this association.

Abstract Image

甲状腺激素在热浪暴露与抑郁严重程度之间的中介作用
据报道,高温暴露与抑郁评分和住院风险有关。然而,热浪如何影响抑郁症的严重程度及其潜在机制尚不清楚。本回顾性研究纳入了2020年1月至2023年12月中国安徽省精神卫生中心住院的抑郁症患者。根据出院诊断将患者分为轻度、中度和重度抑郁三类。采用混合效应logistic回归模型评估入院前2周热浪对抑郁严重程度的影响,采用分段结构方程模型量化甲状腺激素的作用。按性别、年龄、BMI和COVID-19大流行进行分层分析。在研究期间,共有5978名抑郁症住院患者住院7118次。抑郁症的严重程度随着热浪的阈值和持续时间的增加而增加。热浪暴露期间(≥95百分位,≥3天)更严重抑郁的风险比非热浪条件高12.4 %(95 % CI: 6.1 %,19 %)。甲状腺激素的比例的中介效应(发生T3, T4和FT4 /发生比率)是7.7 %(95 % CI: 0.3 %,20.1 %),13.6 %(95 % CI: 1.5 %,30.6 %),12.8 %(95 % CI: 4.3 %,25.7 %)和23.3 %(95 % CI: 11.4 %,54.1 %)在热浪的影响抑郁严重程度,分别。男性、中青年患者、超重患者、新冠肺炎大流行期间住院患者对热浪更敏感。我们的研究表明,热浪与抑郁症的严重程度显著相关。甲状腺激素可能在这一关联中发挥潜在的中介作用。
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来源期刊
Environment International
Environment International 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
21.90
自引率
3.40%
发文量
734
审稿时长
2.8 months
期刊介绍: Environmental Health publishes manuscripts focusing on critical aspects of environmental and occupational medicine, including studies in toxicology and epidemiology, to illuminate the human health implications of exposure to environmental hazards. The journal adopts an open-access model and practices open peer review. It caters to scientists and practitioners across all environmental science domains, directly or indirectly impacting human health and well-being. With a commitment to enhancing the prevention of environmentally-related health risks, Environmental Health serves as a public health journal for the community and scientists engaged in matters of public health significance concerning the environment.
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