高血压、静脉曲张和痔疮导致的自我报告的压力和随后的住院。

Chris Metcalfe, George Davey Smith, John Macleod, Pauline Heslop, Carole Hart
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引用次数: 9

摘要

背景:本研究考察了一个队列,其中社会经济地位优越的个体报告更大的心理压力。我们之前在这个队列中表明,通过出院诊断和死因特异性死亡来衡量,压力与冠心病无关。相反,压力和不需要强制入院的心血管疾病住院相关。我们假设社会心理因素,特别是报告倾向,可能是这种关联的中介,本研究进一步考虑了这一点。方法:共有5596名男性接受了健康筛查,在此期间他们完成了里德压力量表。在21年的随访中,从苏格兰发病率记录中检索了住院详情。采用比例风险回归评估压力与入院之间的关系。结果:与低压力相比,报告的高压力被发现与三种最常见的非强制入院的心血管原因的入院人数增加有关:原发性高血压的调整风险比为3.43(95%置信区间(CI) 1.36-8.65),下肢静脉曲张的调整风险比为1.91 (95% CI 1.12-3.24),痔疮的调整风险比为2.01 (95% CI 1.16-3.51)。基线时的压力和血压没有关联。结论:高血压导致的压力和入院之间的关联似乎不太可能由血压介导。更有可能是一种基于症状报告或出院诊断记录的机制。对于由于静脉曲张或痔疮而导致的压力和住院之间的联系,没有明显的医学解释,而且很可能是社会心理因素提供了这种机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Self-reported stress and subsequent hospital admissions as a result of hypertension, varicose veins and haemorrhoids.

Background: This study examines a cohort in which individuals of privileged socio-economic position report greater psychological stress. We have previously shown in this cohort that stress is unrelated to coronary heart disease as measured by hospital discharge diagnosis and cause-specific death. In contrast, stress and hospitalization for cardiovascular conditions not requiring mandatory admission were associated. We hypothesized that psychosocial factors, in particular reporting tendency, are the likely mediator of this association, and the present study considers this further.

Methods: A total of 5,596 men underwent a health screening during which they completed the Reeder Stress Inventory. Details of hospital admissions were retrieved from the Scottish Morbidity Records over a 21 year follow-up. Relationships between stress and admission were evaluated using proportional hazards regression.

Results: Compared with low stress, reported high stress was found to be associated with increased numbers of admissions for each of three most common cardiovascular causes of non-mandatory admission: adjusted hazard ratios were 3.43 for essential hypertension (95 per cent confidence interval (CI) 1.36-8.65), 1.91 for lower limb varicose veins (95 per cent CI 1.12-3.24), and 2.01 for haemorrhoids (95 per cent CI 1.16-3.51). Stress and blood pressure at baseline were not associated.

Conclusion: The association between stress and admissions as a result of hypertension appears unlikely to be mediated by blood pressure. More likely is a mechanism based upon the reporting of symptoms, or the recording of discharge diagnoses. There is no obvious medical explanation for associations between stress and hospitalization as a result of varicose veins or haemorrhoids, and again it is likely that psychosocial factors provide the mechanism.

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