膜欧米茄-3脂肪酸缺乏作为可预防的危险因素的合并冠心病在重度抑郁症。

Cardiovascular psychiatry and neurology Pub Date : 2009-01-01 Epub Date: 2009-09-16 DOI:10.1155/2009/362795
Robert K McNamara
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引用次数: 19

摘要

重度抑郁症(MDD)显著增加冠心病(CHD)的风险,冠心病是重度抑郁症患者死亡的主要原因。此外,抑郁症在急性冠脉综合征(ACS)后的一部分患者中经常观察到,并增加了死亡风险。本文综述了omega-3 (n-3)脂肪酸缺乏与冠心病和重度抑郁症发病机制相关的证据,并评估了n-3脂肪酸缺乏是重度抑郁症患者冠心病合并症的可预防危险因素的假设。这一假设得到了跨国和横断面流行病学调查的支持,调查发现n-3脂肪酸状态与冠心病和重度糖尿病患病率呈负相关,前瞻性研究发现较低的饮食或膜EPA+DHA水平会增加重度糖尿病和冠心病的风险,病例对照研究发现,重度糖尿病患者的n-3脂肪酸状态使他们处于突发冠心病发病率和死亡率的高风险中。对照n-3脂肪酸干预研究的荟萃分析发现,在减轻重度抑郁症患者抑郁症状严重程度和二级预防冠心病患者心脏事件方面,n-3脂肪酸状态与其他记录的冠心病危险因素呈负相关,并且与非抑郁ACS患者相比,ACS后诊断为重度抑郁症患者的n-3脂肪酸状态显著降低。这一证据为未来的研究提供了强有力的支持,以评估增加饮食中n-3脂肪酸水平对重度抑郁症患者冠心病合并症和死亡率的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Membrane omega-3 Fatty Acid deficiency as a preventable risk factor for comorbid coronary heart disease in major depressive disorder.

Membrane omega-3 Fatty Acid deficiency as a preventable risk factor for comorbid coronary heart disease in major depressive disorder.

Membrane omega-3 Fatty Acid deficiency as a preventable risk factor for comorbid coronary heart disease in major depressive disorder.

Major depression disorder (MDD) significantly increases the risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) which is a leading cause of mortality in patients with MDD. Moreover, depression is frequently observed in a subset of patients following acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and increases risk for mortality. Here evidence implicating omega-3 (n-3) fatty acid deficiency in the pathoaetiology of CHD and MDD is reviewed, and the hypothesis that n-3 fatty acid deficiency is a preventable risk factor for CHD comorbidity in MDD patients is evaluated. This hypothesis is supported by cross-national and cross-sectional epidemiological surveys finding an inverse correlation between n-3 fatty acid status and prevalence rates of both CHD and MDD, prospective studies finding that lower dietary or membrane EPA+DHA levels increase risk for both MDD and CHD, case-control studies finding that the n-3 fatty acid status of MDD patients places them at high risk for emergent CHD morbidity and mortality, meta-analyses of controlled n-3 fatty acid intervention studies finding significant advantage over placebo for reducing depression symptom severity in MDD patients, and for secondary prevention of cardiac events in CHD patients, findings that n-3 fatty acid status is inversely correlated with other documented CHD risk factors, and patients diagnosed with MDD after ACS exhibit significantly lower n-3 fatty acid status compared with nondepressed ACS patients. This body of evidence provides strong support for future studies to evaluate the effects of increasing dietary n-3 fatty acid status on CHD comorbidity and mortality in MDD patients.

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