力量与抑郁呈负相关,并解释了一些性别差异:复制和延伸。

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Pub Date : 2022-02-22 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1093/emph/eoac007
Caroline B Smith, Tom Rosenström, Edward H Hagen
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:女性患抑郁症的几率是男性的两倍,人们对这种差异知之甚少。在之前的一篇文章中,哈根和Rosenström预测并发现握力,一种高度性别二态的身体强健指数,在很大程度上介导了性对抑郁症的影响。像这样惊人的结果比无效的结果更有可能被发表,这可能会使科学记录产生偏差。因此,复制和扩展它们是至关重要的。方法:使用2013-14年全国健康和营养检查调查周期的新数据,一个具有全国代表性的美国家庭样本(n = 3650),我们复制了Hagen和Rosenström报告的性别和握力对抑郁症影响的模型,以及额外的潜在混淆和新的详细症状水平探索。结果:总体而言,原论文的效应得到了再现,尽管效应量较小。握力在性对抑郁的影响中占38%,而在哈根和Rosenström中占63%。这些结果还延伸了另一项发现,即握力与一些抑郁症状(如自杀、低兴趣和情绪低落)的联系比与食欲变化等其他症状的联系更强。结论:握力与抑郁症呈负相关,尤其是其认知-情感症状,控制了许多可能的混杂因素。尽管影响抑郁症的因素很多,但这些因素中很少有可靠的跨文化性别分层方式,因此不太可能解释抑郁症中公认的跨文化性别差异。上肢力量的性别差异在所有人群中都存在,因此,这是抑郁症的一些性别差异的候选进化解释。总结:为什么女性患抑郁症的风险是男性的两倍?抑郁症通常发生在社会冲突中,比如身体虐待或性虐待。身体强壮的人通常可以单枪匹马地解决对他们有利的冲突,而身体较弱的人往往需要别人的帮助。我们认为,抑郁症是一种可信的求救信号。因为男性通常比女性更有力量,我们认为男性可能更倾向于用强健的身体来解决冲突,而女性可能更倾向于向他人发出求助的信号。我们发现,握力越强,抑郁程度越低,尤其是情绪低落或有自杀念头等症状,握力越大,抑郁率的性别差异就越大。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Strength is negatively associated with depression and accounts for some of the sex difference: A replication and extension.

Strength is negatively associated with depression and accounts for some of the sex difference: A replication and extension.

Strength is negatively associated with depression and accounts for some of the sex difference: A replication and extension.

Strength is negatively associated with depression and accounts for some of the sex difference: A replication and extension.

Background: Depression occurs about twice as often in women as in men, a disparity that remains poorly understood. In a previous publication, Hagen and Rosenström predicted and found that grip strength, a highly sexually dimorphic index of physical formidability, mediated much of the effect of sex on depression. Striking results like this are more likely to be published than null results, potentially biasing the scientific record. It is therefore critical to replicate and extend them.

Methodology: Using new data from the 2013-14 cycle of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, a nationally representative sample of US households (n = 3650), we replicated models of the effect of sex and grip strength on depression reported in Hagen and Rosenström, along with additional potential confounds and a new detailed symptom-level exploration.

Results: Overall, the effects from the original paper were reproduced although with smaller effect sizes. Grip strength mediated 38% of the effect of sex on depression, compared to 63% in Hagen and Rosenström. These results were extended with findings that grip strength had a stronger association with some depression symptoms, like suicidality, low interest and low mood than with other symptoms, like appetite changes.

Conclusions: Grip strength is negatively associated with depression, especially its cognitive-affective symptoms, controlling for numerous possible confounds. Although many factors influence depression, few of these reliably occur cross-culturally in a sex-stratified manner and so are unlikely to explain the well-established, cross-cultural sex difference in depression. The sex difference in upper body strength occurs in all populations and is therefore a candidate evolutionary explanation for some of the sex difference in depression. Lay summary: Why are women at twice the risk of developing depression as men? Depression typically occurs during social conflicts, such as physical or sexual abuse. Physically strong individuals can often single-handedly resolve conflicts in their favor, whereas physically weaker individuals often need help from others. We argue that depression is a credible cry for help. Because men generally have greater strength than women, we argue that men may be more likely to resolve conflicts using physical formidability and women to signal others for help. We find that higher grip strength is associated with lower depression, particularly symptoms like feeling down or thoughts of suicide and that strength accounts for part of the sex difference in rates of depression.

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来源期刊
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Environmental Science-Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
2.70%
发文量
37
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: About the Journal Founded by Stephen Stearns in 2013, Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health is an open access journal that publishes original, rigorous applications of evolutionary science to issues in medicine and public health. It aims to connect evolutionary biology with the health sciences to produce insights that may reduce suffering and save lives. Because evolutionary biology is a basic science that reaches across many disciplines, this journal is open to contributions on a broad range of topics.
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