• Title of article

    Association of vital exhaustion and depressive symptoms with changes in fibrin D-dimer to acute psychosocial stress

  • Author/Authors

    von Kنnel، نويسنده , , Roland and Bellingrath، نويسنده , , Silja and Kudielka، نويسنده , , Brigitte M.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    93
  • To page
    101
  • Abstract
    Objective exhaustion and depression are psychosocial risk factors of coronary artery disease. A hypercoagulable state in response to acute psychosocial stress contributes to atherothrombotic events. We aimed to investigate the hypothesis that vital exhaustion and depression correlate with stress-induced changes in the hypercoagulability marker D-dimer. s -eight healthy and nonsmoking school teachers (mean age 50±8 years, 55% women) completed the nine-item Maastricht Vital Exhaustion Questionnaire and the seven-item depression subscale of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Within 1 week, subjects twice underwent the Trier Social Stress Test (i.e., preparation phase, mock job interview, and mental arithmetic that totaled 13 min). Plasma D-dimer levels were determined at five time points during the protocol. s exhaustion (P=.022; η2=.080) and depressive symptoms (P=.011; η2=.090) were associated with stress-induced changes in D-dimer levels over time controlling for sex and age. Elevated levels of vital exhaustion (r=−.46, P=.005) and of depression (r=−.51, P=.002) correlated with reduced D-dimer increase from pre-stress to immediately post-stress. Also, elevated vital exhaustion (r=.34, P=.044) and depression (r=.41, P=.013) were associated with increase (i.e., attenuated recovery) of D-dimer levels between 20 and 45 min post-stress. Controlling for stress hormone and blood pressure reactivity did not substantially alter these results. sion ndings suggest an attenuated immediate D-dimer stress response and delayed recovery of D-dimer levels post-stress with elevated vital exhaustion and depressive symptoms. In particular, the prolonged hypercoagulability after stress cessation might contribute to the atherothrombotic risk previously observed with vital exhaustion and depression, even at subclinical levels.
  • Keywords
    Cardiovascular disease , psychological stress , blood coagulation , depression
  • Journal title
    Journal of Psychosomatic Research
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    Journal of Psychosomatic Research
  • Record number

    1742901