Heartening responses: depression drugs may aid survival after heart attack.Each year, about 200,000 U.S. survivors of heart attacks or related cardiac problems develop major depression, a condition that sharply boosts their chances of having a potentially fatal heart attack. An analysis of data from a large, federally funded clinical trial indicates that when such patients take antidepressant antidepressant, any of a wide range of drugs used to treat psychic depression. They are given to elevate mood, counter suicidal thoughts, and increase the effectiveness of psychotherapy. medication of the class known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors Definition Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are medicines that relieve symptoms of depression. Purpose (SSRIs), they reap major heart-health benefits. In the 29 months after experiencing a heart attack, depressed patients who happened to be taking SSRIs displayed only 57 percent as many bad outcomes--new heart attacks and deaths from cardiac cause--as did depressed heart attack survivors who weren't taking SSRIs. A team led by psychiatrist C. Barr Taylor of Stanford (Calif.) Medical Center reports these findings in the July Archives of General Psychiatry Archives of General Psychiatry is a monthly professional medical journal published by the American Medical Association. Archives of General Psychiatry publishes original, peer-reviewed articles about psychiatry, mental health, behavioral science and related fields. . "If treating major depression [in people with heart disease] reduced mortality by only half of what this study suggests, it would save thousands of lives every year," comments psychiatrist Alexander H. Glassman of Columbia University Columbia University, mainly in New York City; founded 1754 as King's College by grant of King George II; first college in New York City, fifth oldest in the United States; one of the eight Ivy League institutions. . However, the results require confirmation in a long-term investigation of depressed patients with heart disease who are randomly assigned to receive SSRIs, Glassman says. In the past few years, SSRIs have attracted attention because some studies have concluded that the drugs increase the risk that depressed people will attempt suicide (SN: 7/24/04, p. 51). Taylor's group consulted heath data on 1,834 depressed heart attack survivors who participated in a larger clinical trim called Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease coronary heart disease: see coronary artery disease. coronary heart disease or ischemic heart disease Progressive reduction of blood supply to the heart muscle due to narrowing or blocking of a coronary artery (see atherosclerosis). (ENRICHD ENRICHD Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease ). In 2003, a 6-month follow-up of ENRICHD participants found that cognitive-behavioral therapy Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Definition Cognitive-behavioral therapy is an action-oriented form of psychosocial therapy that assumes that maladaptive, or faulty, thinking patterns cause maladaptive behavior and "negative" emotions. produced better moods in depressed patients but didn't reduce the rate of death from new heart attacks. In passing, that report mentioned that the 446 depressed patients who had received antidepressant drugs--and who tended to have the more-severe depression--were roughly 60 percent as likely to die or have subsequent heart attacks as other study participants were. The new report confirms that intriguing result, but only for the 301 individuals who were using SSRIs, Taylor and his coworkers report. Most people in the SSRI SSRI selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor. SSRI n. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; a class of drugs that inhibit the reuptake of serotonin in the central nervous system, used to treat depression and other group were taking sertraline sertraline /ser·tra·line/ (ser´trah-len) a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor used as the hydrochloride salt in the treatment of depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and panic disorder. (Zoloft). No advantages in heart health or survival appeared in 145 patients who received other types of antidepressant medication. Moreover, patients who stopped taking an SSRI during the 29-month follow-up reverted to the higher mortality and heart attack rates of depressed, non-SSRI users. Evidence of benefits for depressed heart-attack survivors taking SSRIs first emerged in a 2002 study directed by Glassman. That investigation included a total of only 369 heart attack patients, too few for the researchers to thoroughly evaluate mortality effects. "Overall, the data suggest that SSRIs are doing something to increase survival and improve health in depressed heart patients" Glassman says. Much remains unknown about this effect, he adds. For instance, it's unclear how long SSRIs need to be taken to yield cardiac benefits and whether these medications would also boost cardiac health in nondepressed heart attack survivors. Nor do scientists know by what physiological mechanisms depression promotes heart disease and SSRIs quell it a. BOWER |
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