Any life-threatening event can leave a person with symptoms of PTSD. Now a new study finds not only that a heart attack can lead to PTSD but PTSD can double a person's risk of future cardiac events and death. Read on...
One in eight people who suffer a heart attack or other acute coronary
event experience clinically significant symptoms of post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD), according to a meta-analysis of 24 studies led
by Columbia University Medical Center researchers. The study also shows
that heart patients who suffer PTSD face twice the risk of having
another cardiac event or of dying within one to three years, compared
with those without PTSD. The findings were published today in the online
edition of PLoS ONE: http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038915.
"While most people think of PTSD as a disorder of combat veterans
and sexual assault survivors, it is also quite common among patients who
have had a severe coronary event," said lead author Donald Edmondson,
PhD, assistant professor of behavioral medicine at CUMC. "Not only are
such events life-threatening, but their psychological impact can be
devastating and long lasting."
PTSD is an anxiety disorder initiated by exposure to a traumatic
event such as combat, disaster, or sexual assault. Common symptoms
include nightmares, avoidance of reminders of the event, and elevated
heart rate and blood pressure.
Each year, about 1.4 million people in the United States experience
an acute coronary syndrome (ACS), a term used to describe any condition
brought about by sudden reduced blood flow to the heart. Numerous small
studies have suggested that ACS-induced PTSD is common and can have
serious health consequences, but its prevalence is not known.
To get a better idea of the scope of the problem, Dr. Edmondson and
his colleagues performed the first combined review, or meta-analysis, of
clinical studies of ACS-induced PTSD. The 24 studies in the
meta-analysis included a total of 2,383 ACS patients from around the
globe.
The study found that overall 12 percent, or one in eight, of the
patients developed clinically significant PTSD symptoms, with four
percent meeting full diagnostic criteria for the disorder.
"Given that some 1.4 million ACS patients are discharged from U.S.
hospitals each year, our results suggest that 168,000 patients will
develop clinically significant PTSD symptoms. That is quite substantial.
However, there is abundant evidence that psychological disorders in
heart patients are underrecognized and undertreated. In fact,
underdiagnosis may be even more pronounced in cardiac practices than in
other types of medical practices," said Dr. Edmondson.
"This is a serious problem for individual patients, as well as for
the healthcare system as a whole," he said. "PTSD appears to double a
heart patient's risk for a second cardiac event and for death, which
adds hundreds of millions of dollars to annual health expenditures."
"Fortunately, there are good treatments for people with PTSD," Dr.
Edmondson said. "But first, physicians and patients have to be aware
that this is a problem. Family members can also help. We know that
social support is a good protective factor against PTSD due to any type
of traumatic event."
"The next step is further research to assess whether treatment can
reduce ACS-induced PTSD symptoms and reduce the associated risk for ACS
recurrence and mortality," said Dr. Edmondson.
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