Guest guest Posted February 23, 2004 Report Share Posted February 23, 2004 the most interesting finding was the fact that the death rate from heart-related problems was 20 percent lower among patients taking the drug. Well, what DID they die of -- suicide????? Clever wording, what! And not too long ago there was a study that showed that mild depression was GOOD for you! D'oh! Who can keep up with the ever-shifting sands of opinion sponsored by Big Pharma. Blind Reason a novel of espionage and pharmaceutical intrigue Think your antidepressant is safe? Think again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2004 Report Share Posted February 23, 2004 One of the first attempts at damage control from most recent bad publicity regarding antidepressants. You'll see more of these types of articles in the coming days.-- A little-known link: depression and heart disease By TARA PARKER-POPE The Associated Press 2/23/04 10:42 AM The Wall Street Journal You may have one of the biggest risk factors for heart attack, and your doctor doesn't even know it. While doctors screening for heart problems know to monitor smoking, high cholesterol and high blood pressure, few doctors pay attention to a potentially more serious foe: depression. Though depression doesn't sound like something that would affect your heart health, many studies around the world show that it clearly does. Otherwise healthy patients with symptoms of depression have been shown to have as much as a 70 percent higher risk of having a heart attack -- making depression almost as serious a risk factor as smoking. And depression can increase the chance of dying in the months after a heart attack by as much as 3.5 times. Earlier this month, more evidence about the link between depression and heart attack came from the Women's Health Initiative, the largest ever study of postmenopausal women. Among the more than 93,000 women studied, women who were depressed had a 50 percent greater risk of developing or dying from cardiovascular disease than women who didn't show signs of depression. The study showed that even among healthy women with no prior history of heart problems, depression proved to be a significant risk factor for developing heart problems and later dying from them. It's important to note that women with severe depression or other forms of mental illness weren't included in the study, and the women at risk often had only mild or moderate symptoms of depression. The results from the Women's Health Initiative bolster the link between depression and heart disease, but for a variety of reasons, very little is being done about it. The biggest problem is that no study has shown conclusively that treating depression, with either therapy or antidepressant drugs, makes a difference in heart health. In a study of nearly 2,500 heart-attack patients, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in June, behavioral therapy to treat depression didn't change survival rates compared with patients who received regular care. But despite the disappointing results, the study, known as the Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease Patients, or Enrichd, did produce an intriguing finding. About 20 percent of patients in the study ended up on antidepressants, either because they weren't responding to therapy or because they were in the control group and needed to be treated for severe depression. Among those patients, the risk of dying or suffering a second nonfatal heart attack was 42 percent lower. A separate study of the antidepressant sertraline (sold under the brand name Zoloft) was designed to test whether the drug was safe to use in heart patients. While the study, called Sadheart (Sertraline Antidepressant Heart Attack Randomized Trial), showed the drug to be safe, the most interesting finding was the fact that the death rate from heart-related problems was 20 percent lower among patients taking the drug. Neither study, however, proves that drug therapy can make a difference for heart patients. In the Enrichd study, patients weren't randomly given the drugs, so those data aren't reliable. The Sadheart study wasn't designed to assess whether the drugs worked -- only that they were safe. There simply weren't enough people studied to make the lower-death-rate trend statistically significant. The simple answer would be to drum up another study big enough to show whether antidepressant treatment can make a difference for heart patients. But Zoloft and many of the big antidepressants are soon losing patent protection -- meaning drug companies have no financial incentive to pony up the funds for a heart study. And while new antidepressants are being introduced, a heart study is low on the list of priorities. That's because depression in heart patients tends to be mild or moderate -- and the placebo effect makes it tough to show an antidepressant makes a difference. What's more, because heart patients typically take a number of drugs, doctors are wary of prescribing new antidepressants that haven't yet been proved safe for heart patients. The other problem is that the issue cuts across two disciplines -- cardiac care and psychiatry -- making it tough to win support for the issue. Cardiologists typically aren't interested in depression, and psychiatrists don't usually think about heart disease and diabetes. Big-money groups, such as the American Heart Association or the National Institutes of Health, have yet to make depression and heart disease a significant budget priority, focusing instead on other heart issues. " In cardiology there have been dozens of studies done on hypertension, " says Freedland, professor of psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, who has been studying the link between depression and heart disease since the 1980s. " We need to make sure the public and medical community understand that this is an important problem, too. " The problem is most apparent when a patient seeks care. Cardiologists and family-practice doctors often don't screen for depression, and psychiatrists are rarely called in to assess patients with heart disease. " If there were a large 4,000-patient study, it would change how cardiologists, internists and general practitioners looked at depression, " says Glassman, professor of psychiatry at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and lead author of the Sadheart study. " They'd have new respect for it. " So, what should patients do? The first step is to take depression seriously. During your next physical, talk to the doctor about depression just as you would discuss other general health issues. Depression poses the highest risk to patients with known heart disease or a history of heart attack, so they or their family members should pay particular attention to symptoms. Most doctors are aware of simple questions that can easily screen for symptoms of depression, which include a persistent sad, anxious or empty mood; loss of interest in hobbies, sex or other pleasurable activities; insomnia; fatigue; and appetite change. Women should also be aware of the risk, because their symptoms may easily be dismissed as emotional fluctuations triggered by menopause. " Doctors need to pay attention to it and consider it as another risk factor for heart disease just like high cholesterol -- and not write it off as a complaint of postmenopausal women, " says Sylvia Wassertheil-Smoller, professor of epidemiology and population health at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York and lead author of the Women's Health Initiative depression study. And finally, even though there's no proof yet that treating depression will make a difference in heart health, that's not an excuse to ignore it. " There are other reasons to treat depression, " says Pickering, director of Columbia University Medical Center's Behavioral Cardiovascular Health and Hypertension Program. " You should treat it because people feel better and function better. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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