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Psychological depression and cardiac surgery: A comprehensive review

journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-12, 03:47 authored by PJ Tully
The psychological and neurological impact of cardiac surgery has been of keen empirical interest for more than two decades although reports showing the prognostic influence of depression on adverse outcomes lag behind the evidence documented in heart failure, myocardial infarction, and unstable angina. The paucity of research to date is surprising considering that some pathophysiological mechanisms through which depression is hypothesized to affect coronary heart disease (e.g., platelet activation, the inflammatory system, dysrhythmias) are known to be substantially influenced by the use of cardiopulmonary bypass. As such, cardiac surgery may provide a suitable exemplar to better understand the psychiatric mechanisms of cardiopathogenesis. The extant literature is comprehensively reviewed with respect to the deleterious impact of depression on cardiac and neuropsychological morbidity and mortality. Research to date indicates that depression and major depressive episodes increase major cardiovascular morbidity risk after cardiac surgery. The association between depressive disorders and incident delirium is of particular relevance to cardiac surgery staff. Contemporary treatment intervention studies are also described along with suggestions for future cardiac surgery research.

History

Journal

Journal of Extra-Corporeal Technology

Volume

44

Pagination

224-232

Location

Reston, Va.

Open access

  • No

ISSN

0022-1058

eISSN

2969-8960

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

American Society of Extra-Corporeal Technology