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Researchers analyze the effects of PTSD and its correlation to behaviors associated with heart-related illness.

Women with severe posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms have a nearly 70% increase in the incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD), according to a study by researchers from Harvard and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, Columbia University in New York, and University of California in San Francisco.

The researchers analyzed data from 49,859 women in the Nurses’ Health Study II. Over 20 years, there were 552 confirmed cases of myocardial infarction or stroke.

Women with 6 to 7 symptoms of trauma and PTSD had the highest risk. Women with trauma but no PTSD symptoms had a 30% higher risk. When women who said illness was their worst trauma were excluded, the risk of CVD doubled among those with trauma and severe PTSD symptoms and increased by 88% in women with trauma and moderate PTSD symptoms.

Strikingly, the researchers also found that when the PTSD symptoms declined so did the CVD risk. The researchers note that CVD risk due to other well-known risk factors, such as smoking, increases with exposure duration declines once the risk factor is eliminated. In this study, for every 5 additional years PTSD symptoms lasted, the odds of CVD were 9% higher.

A “more nuanced understanding” of the role of health behaviors could add insight into how PTSD influences the risk of CVD, the researchers say. They point to studies that have found a link between PTSD and cardiotoxic behaviors such as smoking, drinking, and diet. Physiologic alterations that occur with PTSD symptoms also may play an important role, they suggest, such as changes in neuropeptide Y in response to stress, which might contribute to metabolic syndrome.

Citing “particularly intriguing” findings from a study that found symptoms eventually remitted in 44% of individuals with PTSD, the researchers say providing treatment shortly after PTSD symptoms begin could limit the risk of CVD and, potentially, other disease-related risk.

Source:
Gilsanz P, Winning A, Koenen KC, et al. Psychol Med. 2017;47(8):1370-1378.
doi: 10.1017/S0033291716003378.

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Researchers analyze the effects of PTSD and its correlation to behaviors associated with heart-related illness.
Researchers analyze the effects of PTSD and its correlation to behaviors associated with heart-related illness.

Women with severe posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms have a nearly 70% increase in the incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD), according to a study by researchers from Harvard and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, Columbia University in New York, and University of California in San Francisco.

The researchers analyzed data from 49,859 women in the Nurses’ Health Study II. Over 20 years, there were 552 confirmed cases of myocardial infarction or stroke.

Women with 6 to 7 symptoms of trauma and PTSD had the highest risk. Women with trauma but no PTSD symptoms had a 30% higher risk. When women who said illness was their worst trauma were excluded, the risk of CVD doubled among those with trauma and severe PTSD symptoms and increased by 88% in women with trauma and moderate PTSD symptoms.

Strikingly, the researchers also found that when the PTSD symptoms declined so did the CVD risk. The researchers note that CVD risk due to other well-known risk factors, such as smoking, increases with exposure duration declines once the risk factor is eliminated. In this study, for every 5 additional years PTSD symptoms lasted, the odds of CVD were 9% higher.

A “more nuanced understanding” of the role of health behaviors could add insight into how PTSD influences the risk of CVD, the researchers say. They point to studies that have found a link between PTSD and cardiotoxic behaviors such as smoking, drinking, and diet. Physiologic alterations that occur with PTSD symptoms also may play an important role, they suggest, such as changes in neuropeptide Y in response to stress, which might contribute to metabolic syndrome.

Citing “particularly intriguing” findings from a study that found symptoms eventually remitted in 44% of individuals with PTSD, the researchers say providing treatment shortly after PTSD symptoms begin could limit the risk of CVD and, potentially, other disease-related risk.

Source:
Gilsanz P, Winning A, Koenen KC, et al. Psychol Med. 2017;47(8):1370-1378.
doi: 10.1017/S0033291716003378.

Women with severe posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms have a nearly 70% increase in the incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD), according to a study by researchers from Harvard and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, Columbia University in New York, and University of California in San Francisco.

The researchers analyzed data from 49,859 women in the Nurses’ Health Study II. Over 20 years, there were 552 confirmed cases of myocardial infarction or stroke.

Women with 6 to 7 symptoms of trauma and PTSD had the highest risk. Women with trauma but no PTSD symptoms had a 30% higher risk. When women who said illness was their worst trauma were excluded, the risk of CVD doubled among those with trauma and severe PTSD symptoms and increased by 88% in women with trauma and moderate PTSD symptoms.

Strikingly, the researchers also found that when the PTSD symptoms declined so did the CVD risk. The researchers note that CVD risk due to other well-known risk factors, such as smoking, increases with exposure duration declines once the risk factor is eliminated. In this study, for every 5 additional years PTSD symptoms lasted, the odds of CVD were 9% higher.

A “more nuanced understanding” of the role of health behaviors could add insight into how PTSD influences the risk of CVD, the researchers say. They point to studies that have found a link between PTSD and cardiotoxic behaviors such as smoking, drinking, and diet. Physiologic alterations that occur with PTSD symptoms also may play an important role, they suggest, such as changes in neuropeptide Y in response to stress, which might contribute to metabolic syndrome.

Citing “particularly intriguing” findings from a study that found symptoms eventually remitted in 44% of individuals with PTSD, the researchers say providing treatment shortly after PTSD symptoms begin could limit the risk of CVD and, potentially, other disease-related risk.

Source:
Gilsanz P, Winning A, Koenen KC, et al. Psychol Med. 2017;47(8):1370-1378.
doi: 10.1017/S0033291716003378.

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