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Mood and the heart
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Mind and mood can adversely affect the cardiovascular system
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Heart disease can be depressing, literally. About 50 per cent of hospitalised heart patients have some depressive symptoms, and up to 20 per cent develop major depression, and depression affects heart health.
Patients who are depressed at the time of hospitalisation for heart conditions are two to five times more likely than average to die or to suffer further cardiovascular events such as heart attack, stroke, or severe chest pain in the following year.
Mind and mood can affect the cardiovascular system directly by creating a state of emergency readiness, in which stress hormone levels rise, blood vessels constrict and heartbeat speeds up. If a person is seriously depressed or anxious, the emergency response becomes constant, damaging the blood vessels and making the heart less sensitive to signals telling it to slow down or speed up as the body's demands change, reports the Harvard Mental Health Letter.
Research suggests that the type of antidepressants called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may benefit depressed heart patients and possibly reduce their risk for future heart problems. Cardiac rehabilitation programs that sustain patients' morale may also help reduce the damage depression does to the heart. (ANI)
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Metro Plus
Bangalore
Chennai
Coimbatore
Delhi
Hyderabad
Kochi
Madurai
Mangalore
Pondicherry
Tiruchirapalli
Thiruvananthapuram
Vijayawada
Visakhapatnam
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