D型人格与心血管病史的关系:横断面研究

IF 2.2 Q2 Medicine
JMIR Cardio Pub Date : 2026-03-10 DOI:10.2196/79159
Keren Grinberg, Yael Sela
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:D型人格的特点是高度的消极情感和社会抑制,与较差的心理健康和较高的心血管不良后果风险有关。虽然以前的研究已经检查了D型人格、心理困扰和心血管疾病(CVD)之间的关系,但许多研究都是独立评估这些因素,依赖于临床样本,或者忽略了心理困扰和CVD史的同时评估。因此,在普通人群中,D型特征与情绪困扰和心血管疾病史的关系尚不清楚。了解这些关系可能有助于早期识别高危个体,并加强心理筛查与心血管护理的结合。目的:本研究旨在(1)研究D型人格、情绪困扰(抑郁、焦虑和压力)和自述心血管疾病史之间的关系;(2)比较有和无心血管疾病病史受试者的痛苦程度;(3)确定D型人格对情绪困扰的预测是否独立于人口统计学因素和心血管疾病病史。方法:通过社交媒体上的便利抽样和滚雪球抽样的方式,对146名30 ~ 85岁的成年人进行横断面在线调查。D型人格用D型量表14进行评估,情绪困扰用抑郁、焦虑和压力量表21进行测量。CVD病史通过一个关于先前心血管疾病诊断的单一自我报告问题被捕获。描述性统计描述了样本的特征。双尾独立样本t检验比较了有和没有D型人格的个体以及有和没有心血管疾病病史的参与者之间的痛苦程度。皮尔逊相关系数检验了关键变量之间的关联。分层多元回归评估了D型人格是否能预测年龄、性别、教育程度和心血管疾病史以外的情绪困扰。结果:146名参与者中,40名(27.4%)报告有心血管疾病史,62名(42.5%)符合D型人格标准。与非D型参与者相比,D型人格的个体表现出更高的抑郁、焦虑和压力水平。结论:在一般人群中,D型人格特征与更高水平的心理困扰和更大的自我报告心血管疾病史的可能性相关。考虑到人口因素和心血管病史后,D型人格仍然是痛苦的重要预测因子,强调其在早期心理风险识别中的潜在作用。将简短的人格和心理健康筛查纳入心血管评估可能支持更全面的护理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Association Between Type D Personality and Cardiovascular Disease History: Cross-Sectional Study.

Background: Type D personality, characterized by high negative affectivity and social inhibition, has been linked to poorer mental health and heightened risk for adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Although previous studies have examined associations between type D personality, psychological distress, and cardiovascular disease (CVD), many have assessed these factors independently, relied on clinical samples, or overlooked the simultaneous assessment of psychological distress and CVD history. Consequently, less is known about how type D traits relate to emotional distress and CVD history within the general population. Understanding these relationships may support early identification of at-risk individuals and strengthen the integration of psychological screening into cardiovascular care.

Objective: This study aimed to (1) examine associations between type D personality, emotional distress (depression, anxiety, and stress), and self-reported CVD history; (2) compare distress levels among participants with and without CVD history; and (3) determine whether type D personality predicts emotional distress independent of demographic factors and CVD history.

Methods: A cross-sectional online survey was completed by 146 adults aged 30 to 85 years, recruited through convenience and snowball sampling on social media. Type D personality was assessed using the Type D Scale-14, and emotional distress was measured using the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale-21 items. CVD history was captured through a single self-report question regarding prior diagnosis of a cardiovascular condition. Descriptive statistics characterized the sample. Two-tailed independent samples t tests compared distress between individuals with and without type D personality and between participants with and without CVD history. Pearson correlation coefficients examined associations among key variables. Hierarchical multiple regression assessed whether type D personality predicted emotional distress beyond age, gender, education, and CVD history.

Results: Of the 146 participants, 40 (27.4%) reported a history of CVD and 62 (42.5%) met criteria for type D personality. Individuals with type D personality exhibited significantly higher depression, anxiety, and stress levels than non-type D participants (all P<.001). Participants with CVD history also reported greater distress compared with those without CVD history. Hierarchical regression analyses showed that type D personality remained a strong independent predictor of emotional distress (β=.46; P<.001) after adjusting for demographics and CVD history. CVD history made an additional but smaller contribution to distress (β=.18; P=.008). These findings highlight the cumulative influence of personality traits and cardiovascular background on psychological well-being.

Conclusions: Type D personality traits have been associated with higher levels of psychological distress and with a greater likelihood of self-reported CVD history in the general population. Type D personality remained a significant predictor of distress after accounting for demographic factors and cardiovascular history, underscoring its potential role in early psychological risk identification. Incorporating brief personality and mental health screening into cardiovascular assessment may support more comprehensive care.

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来源期刊
JMIR Cardio
JMIR Cardio Computer Science-Computer Science Applications
CiteScore
3.50
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0.00%
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25
审稿时长
12 weeks
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