多病的三角测量:对原发性睡眠障碍、高血压和精神障碍的系统回顾。

IF 2.5
PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-10-01 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0005216
Chadia Haddad, Hala Sacre, Samah Tawil, Pascale Salameh, Sola Aoun Bahous
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管越来越多的证据表明高血压、睡眠障碍和精神健康之间存在相互联系,但它们之间关系的确切性质以及它们之间联合或协同作用的可能性仍不清楚。潜在的机制包括环境因素、家庭压力、经济困难、治疗副作用和共同的病理生理合并症。因此,本系统综述旨在通过全面评估成人中这三种情况之间的相互关系来解决这一差距。根据系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目进行系统评价。文献检索在三个数据库中进行:PubMed, SCOPUS和CINAHL。从最初的1759篇文章中,有45篇符合纳入标准并被用于分析。大多数研究使用不同的定义和方法来评估这三种情况之间的关联。通常报道阳性(60-75%)或非显著相关(25-40%),未发现负相关。这种一致的模式表明,这些条件是相互关联的,即使在某些情况下没有达到统计显著性。总之,睡眠障碍、高血压和精神疾病之间的关联在大多数研究中都得到了强调,主要表现为正相关或非显著相关,没有研究报告这三种疾病之间存在负相关。这些发现表明,以综合的方式解决这些问题可能会改善临床管理和患者预后。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The triangulation of multimorbidity: A systematic review of primary sleep disorders, hypertension, and psychiatric disorders.

The triangulation of multimorbidity: A systematic review of primary sleep disorders, hypertension, and psychiatric disorders.

The triangulation of multimorbidity: A systematic review of primary sleep disorders, hypertension, and psychiatric disorders.

The triangulation of multimorbidity: A systematic review of primary sleep disorders, hypertension, and psychiatric disorders.

Despite the growing evidence of the interconnectedness of hypertension, sleep disorders, and mental health, the exact nature of the relationships and the potential for combined or synergistic effects remain unclear. Potential mechanisms include environmental factors, family stressors, financial difficulties, treatment side effects and shared pathophysiological comorbidities. Therefore, this systematic review aimed to address this gap by assessing comprehensively the interrelationships between these three conditions among adults. A systematic review was conducted in line with the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses. The literature search was performed across three databases: PubMed, SCOPUS, and CINAHL. From an initial pool of 1759 articles, 45 met the inclusion criteria and were used in the analysis. Most studies assessed the associations between the three conditions pairwise, using different definitions and methods. Positive (60-75%) or non-significant associations (25-40%) were commonly reported, with no inverse associations identified. This consistent pattern suggests that these conditions are interrelated, even when statistical significance was not reached in some cases. In conclusion, the association between sleep disorders, hypertension, and psychiatric diseases is highlighted in the majority of studies, showing predominantly positive or non-significant relationships, with no studies reporting inverse associations among these three conditions. These findings suggest that addressing these conditions in an integrated manner may improve clinical management and patient outcomes.

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