Stroke survivors are under massive psychological distress because their doctors know nothing and tell them nothing about getting 100% recovered. Bad research because they excluded stroke and MI patients, now further research will be required. Take the test yourself to see how distressed you are;
Kessler Psychological Distress
A Prospective Cohort Study
Originally published28 Aug 2018Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes. 2018;11:e004500
Abstract
Background
The
interplay between mental and physical health remains poorly understood.
We investigated whether psychological distress is associated with risk
of myocardial infarction (MI) and stroke in a population-based
prospective study.
Methods and Results
We
included participants
without prior stroke/MI from the New South Wales
45 and Up Study. We categorized baseline psychological distress as low,
medium, and high/very high on the 10-item
Kessler Psychological Distress
scale and identified stroke and MI through linkage to hospital
admission and mortality records. We obtained sex and age-stratified
adjusted and unadjusted hazard ratios for the association between
psychological distress and MI and stroke. We investigated for
interaction between psychological distress and each of age and sex.
Among 221 677 participants, 16.2% and 7.3% had moderate and high/very
high psychological distress at recruitment, respectively. During 4.7
(±0.98 SD) years of follow-up, 4573 MIs and 2421 strokes occurred.
Absolute risk of MI and stroke increased with increasing psychological
distress level. In men aged 45 to 79 years, high/very high versus low
psychological distress was associated with a 30% increased risk of MI
(fully adjusted hazard ratios, 1.30; 95% CI, 1.12–1.51), with weaker
estimates in those aged ≥80 years. Among women, high/very high
psychological distress was associated with an 18% increased risk of MI
(adjusted hazard ratio, 1.18; 95% CI, 0.99–1.42) with similar findings
across age groups. In the age group of participants aged 45 to 79 years,
high/very high psychological distress and male sex had a supra-additive
effect on MI risk. Similar estimates were observed for stroke, with
high/very high psychological distress associated with a 24% and 44%
increased stroke risk in men and women, respectively, with no evidence
of interaction with age or sex.
Conclusions
Psychological
distress has a strong, dose-dependent, positive association with MI and
stroke in men and women, despite adjustment for a wide range of
confounders.
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