Psychocardiology: the spectrum of stress in the genesis of heart disease: a point of view

Horst J Koch Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, HELIOS Clinic Aue – Academic Hospital of the Technical University Dresden, Aue, Germany Abstract: Psychiatric disease, particularly depression and stress disorders, worsens the outcome of cardiovascular disease by about a factor of t...

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Main Author: Koch HJ
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2013-08-01
Series:Research Reports in Clinical Cardiology
Online Access:http://www.dovepress.com/psychocardiology-the-spectrum-of-stress-in-the-genesis-of-heart-diseas-a13972
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spelling doaj-b89ad13a4c594b75ad0584ae5e8b04c32020-11-24T21:26:29ZengDove Medical PressResearch Reports in Clinical Cardiology1179-84752013-08-012013default153157Psychocardiology: the spectrum of stress in the genesis of heart disease: a point of viewKoch HJHorst J Koch Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, HELIOS Clinic Aue – Academic Hospital of the Technical University Dresden, Aue, Germany Abstract: Psychiatric disease, particularly depression and stress disorders, worsens the outcome of cardiovascular disease by about a factor of two to three. Conversely, heart disease can also cause or aggravate affective disorders in the person concerned. Although this mind–heart interaction has been known since the 1930s, many questions about the underlying mutual pathophysiology remain. Apart from psychological stress models, inflammatory or psychoimmunology processes and metabolic or endocrinological mechanisms may be involved, as might lifestyle and drug treatments. Takotsubo, or broken-heart cardiomyopathy, which frequently occurs in response to stressful events, and post-myocardial infarction depression may serve as paradigms in seeking to understand the pathological basis of the mind–heart relationship. Keywords: broken-heart cardiomyopathy, takotsubo, post-infarction depression, mind–heart interaction, pathophysiologyhttp://www.dovepress.com/psychocardiology-the-spectrum-of-stress-in-the-genesis-of-heart-diseas-a13972
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Koch HJ
spellingShingle Koch HJ
Psychocardiology: the spectrum of stress in the genesis of heart disease: a point of view
Research Reports in Clinical Cardiology
author_facet Koch HJ
author_sort Koch HJ
title Psychocardiology: the spectrum of stress in the genesis of heart disease: a point of view
title_short Psychocardiology: the spectrum of stress in the genesis of heart disease: a point of view
title_full Psychocardiology: the spectrum of stress in the genesis of heart disease: a point of view
title_fullStr Psychocardiology: the spectrum of stress in the genesis of heart disease: a point of view
title_full_unstemmed Psychocardiology: the spectrum of stress in the genesis of heart disease: a point of view
title_sort psychocardiology: the spectrum of stress in the genesis of heart disease: a point of view
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Research Reports in Clinical Cardiology
issn 1179-8475
publishDate 2013-08-01
description Horst J Koch Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, HELIOS Clinic Aue – Academic Hospital of the Technical University Dresden, Aue, Germany Abstract: Psychiatric disease, particularly depression and stress disorders, worsens the outcome of cardiovascular disease by about a factor of two to three. Conversely, heart disease can also cause or aggravate affective disorders in the person concerned. Although this mind–heart interaction has been known since the 1930s, many questions about the underlying mutual pathophysiology remain. Apart from psychological stress models, inflammatory or psychoimmunology processes and metabolic or endocrinological mechanisms may be involved, as might lifestyle and drug treatments. Takotsubo, or broken-heart cardiomyopathy, which frequently occurs in response to stressful events, and post-myocardial infarction depression may serve as paradigms in seeking to understand the pathological basis of the mind–heart relationship. Keywords: broken-heart cardiomyopathy, takotsubo, post-infarction depression, mind–heart interaction, pathophysiology
url http://www.dovepress.com/psychocardiology-the-spectrum-of-stress-in-the-genesis-of-heart-diseas-a13972
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