Author/Authors :
Andreas and Oulis، نويسنده , , Panagiotis and Kouzoupis، نويسنده , , Anastasios and Kyrkou، نويسنده , , Katerina and Masdrakis، نويسنده , , Vasilios G. and Georgiopoulos، نويسنده , , George and Karapoulios، نويسنده , , Evangelos K. Georgiou، نويسنده , , Stellios and Karakatsanis، نويسنده , , Nikolaos A. and Lykka، نويسنده , , Maria and Papadimitriou، نويسنده , , George N. and Papamichael، نويسنده , , Christos and Stamatelopoulos، نويسنده , , Kimon، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background
sed arterial stiffness (AS) might be one significant acute mediator of the well-attested association between female depression and cardiovascular disease.
s
ted this hypothesis in an inpatient sample of 20 drug-free women undergoing a new clinically severe major depressive episode of recent onset with an adequately matched mentally healthy control group. Patientsʹ clinical (Hamilton Depression Rating Scale) and vascular (Pulse–Wave–Velocity, PWV) assessments were performed both before the initiation and after the completion of their six-week antidepressant treatment.
s
gh initially patients exhibited significantly higher PWV values than controls, this was decreased and reached comparable levels to controls after treatment completion. Moreover, full-responders exhibited significantly greater vascular improvement than their partial-responders counterparts and the magnitude of their amelioration was strongly associated with the magnitude of their clinical improvement.
tions
mple-size was small and patientsʹ follow-up short.
sions
ndings provide support to the hypothesis that current severe major depressive episode in women leads acutely to aggravation of arterial stiffness, reversible however upon timely and effective antidepressant treatment.
Keywords :
Antidepressants , Arterial stiffness , Major Depression , Pulse–wave velocity , Cardiovascular disease