10 years observation study of low and moderate cardiovascular risk hypertensive patients: the impact of anxiety and depression level in development of cardiovascular complications

Abstract   Not only “classic” risk factors such as age, sex, smoking status, blood pressure (BP) and cholesterol (HS) levels, but also additional factors, one of which is the psychological status of the patient, need to be considered to improve the prediction of cardiovascular complications. This is...

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Veröffentlicht in:European heart journal 2020-11, Vol.41 (Supplement_2)
Hauptverfasser: Smirnova, M.D, Blankova, Z.N, Barinova, I.V, Fofanova, T.V, Svirida, O.N, Ageev, F.T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract   Not only “classic” risk factors such as age, sex, smoking status, blood pressure (BP) and cholesterol (HS) levels, but also additional factors, one of which is the psychological status of the patient, need to be considered to improve the prediction of cardiovascular complications. This is especially true for low/moderate risk patients on the SCORE scale, whose risk of cardiovascular complications (CVC) is often underestimated. Aim To assess the contribution of psychological status of hypertensive patients and SCORE11 points) – 18.3% (n=26). 2 CVD occurred in the observed group in 10 years (1.4%), 6 MI, 12 percutaneous coronary intervention (8 acute coronary syndrome), 4 strokes, 34 cardiovascular hospitalizations. 14 new onset cases of coronary artery disease (9.6%). Thus 31.7% of observed patients had CVC. Comparison of the initial data of the group with CVC with the group without CVC revealed a difference only in the level of D: 7.0 (5.6; 7.3) points in patients with CVC vs 5.0 (4.7; 5.8) p=0.04) – Fig. 1. The patients were comparable in sex and age. BP, lipid profile, glucose, heart rate, smoking status, levels of A did not differ significantly. Multi-factor regression analysis has demonstrated that depression levels D is a
ISSN:0195-668X
1522-9645
DOI:10.1093/ehjci/ehaa946.2849