Depression, stress and vascular function from childhood to adolescence: A longitudinal investigation
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Authors
Olive, Lisa
Abhayaratna, Walter
Byrne, Donald
Telford, Rohan M.
Berk, Michael
Telford, Richard D.
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Elsevier BV
Abstract
Background: Psychological distress is associated with risk markers for cardiovascular disease, including increased
arterial stiffness and high blood pressure, but it's unclear when these first manifest. This study aims to
investigate the effect of psychosocial stress and depression on arterial stiffness and blood pressure in a cohort
study of Australian children followed through to adolescence.
Method: Depression and psychosocial stress in 520 young people (265 boys; M age = 11.6 y) were assessed via
the Children's Depression Inventory and Children's Stress Questionnaire respectively. Carotid-femoral pulse
wave velocity was assessed using applanation tonometry, with further assessments of supine brachial blood
pressure and percent body fat (dual x-ray absorptiometry). All measures were repeated four years later at age 16-
years.
Results: We found no cross-sectional or longitudinal evidence that children self-reporting higher levels of psychosocial
stress or depressive symptoms had greater arterial stiffness. Children reporting an increase in depressive
symptoms had an increase in diastolic blood pressure and mean arterial pressure over time. An effect
was also evident for pulse pressure, where higher pulse pressure was found in children with lower psychosocial
stress at baseline and in children self-reporting a decrease in stress between baseline and follow-up.
Conclusions: Findings from the current study contribute to the scant paediatric literature but only provide
limited support for any influence of psychological factors on blood pressure. Depressive symptoms in apparently
healthy adolescents may exert some influence on later risk for cardiovascular disease via increases in diastolic
blood pressure and mean arterial pressure, but these effects were small.
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General Hospital Psychiatry
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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