Psychosocial Distress and Stroke Risk in Older Adults

Author:

Henderson Kimberly M.1,Clark Cari J.1,Lewis Tené T.1,Aggarwal Neelum T.1,Beck Todd1,Guo Hongfei1,Lunos Scott1,Brearley Ann1,Mendes de Leon Carlos F.1,Evans Denis A.1,Everson-Rose Susan A.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Medicine (K.M.H., C.J.C., S.A.E.-R.), Division of Biostatistics (H.G., A.B.), Biostatistical Design and Analysis Center, Clinical and Translational Science Institute (H.G., S.L., A.B.), University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN; Department of Epidemiology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA (T.T.L.); Department of Neurological Sciences and Rush Alzheimers Disease Center (N.T.A.), Rush Institute for Healthy Aging (N.T.A., T.B.), Department of Internal Medicine (D.A.E.), Rush...

Abstract

Background and Purpose— To investigate the association of psychosocial distress with risk of stroke mortality and incident stroke in older adults. Methods— Data were from the Chicago Health and Aging Project, a longitudinal population-based study conducted in 3 contiguous neighborhoods on the south side of Chicago, IL. Participants were community-dwelling black and non-Hispanic white adults, aged 65 years and older (n=4120 for stroke mortality; n=2649 for incident stroke). Psychosocial distress was an analytically derived composite measure of depressive symptoms, perceived stress, neuroticism, and life dissatisfaction. Cox proportional hazards models examined the association of distress with stroke mortality and incident stroke over 6 years of follow-up. Results— Stroke deaths (151) and 452 incident strokes were identified. Adjusting for age, race, and sex, the hazard ratio (HR) for each 1-SD increase in distress was 1.47 (95% confidence interval [CI]=1.28–1.70) for stroke mortality and 1.18 (95% CI=1.07–1.30) for incident stroke. Associations were reduced after adjustment for stroke risk factors and remained significant for stroke mortality (HR=1.29; 95% CI=1.10–1.52) but not for incident stroke (HR=1.09; 95% CI=0.98–1.21). Secondary analyses of stroke subtypes showed that distress was strongly related to incident hemorrhagic strokes (HR=1.70; 95% CI=1.28–2.25) but not ischemic strokes (HR=1.02; 95% CI=0.91–1.15) in fully adjusted models. Conclusions— Increasing levels of psychosocial distress are related to excess risk of both fatal and nonfatal stroke in older black and white adults. Additional research is needed to examine pathways linking psychosocial distress to cerebrovascular disease risk.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

Reference26 articles.

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