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Association between major depressive disorder and heart rate variability in the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA).

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TLDR
This study shows that depression is associated with significantly lowered heart rate variability, however, this association appears to be mainly driven by the effect of antidepressants.
Abstract
Context It has been hypothesized that depression is associated with lower heart rate variability and decreased cardiac vagal control. This may play an important role in the risk of cardiovascular disease among depressed individuals. Objective To determine whether heart rate variability was lower in depressed individuals than in healthy controls in a large adult sample. Design Cross-sectional analyses from a large depression cohort study. Setting The Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety. Participants Two thousand three hundred seventy-three individuals (mean age, 41.8 years; 66.8% female) who participated in the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety. Included were 524 controls, 774 individuals with a diagnosis of major depressive disorder (MDD) earlier in life (remitted MDD), and 1075 individuals with current MDD based on the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. This sample was sufficiently powered to examine the confounding effects of lifestyle, comorbid anxiety, and antidepressants. Main Outcome Measures The standard deviation of normal-to-normal beats (SDNN) and cardiac vagal control, as indexed by respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), were measured during 1½ hours of ambulatory recording of electrocardiograms and thorax impedance. Multivariate analyses were conducted to compare SDNN and RSA across depression groups after adjustment for demographics, health, lifestyle, comorbid anxiety, and psychoactive medication. Results Individuals with remitted and current MDD had a lower mean SDNN and RSA compared with controls (SDNN, 3.1-5.7 milliseconds shorter, P  ≤ .02; RSA, 5.1-7.1 milliseconds shorter, P Conclusions This study shows that depression is associated with significantly lowered heart rate variability. However, this association appears to be mainly driven by the effect of antidepressants.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of depression and antidepressant treatment on heart rate variability: a review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: Depression without CVD is associated with reducedHRV, which decreases with increasing depression severity, most apparent with nonlinear measures of HRV, highlighting that antidepressant medications might not have HRV-mediated cardioprotective effects and the need to identify individuals at risk among patients in remission.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding the somatic consequences of depression: biological mechanisms and the role of depression symptom profile

TL;DR: The heterogeneity of the depression concept seems to play a differentiating role: metabolic syndrome and inflammation up-regulations appear more specific to the atypical depression subtype, whereas hypercortisolemia appears more specific for melancholic depression.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between mental and physical health: Insights from the study of heart rate variability

TL;DR: This work shows that otherwise healthy, unmedicated patients with these disorders display reduced resting-state HRV, and that pharmacological treatments do not ameliorate these reductions, and proposes a working model for the effects of mood disorders, comorbid conditions, and their treatments to help guide future research activities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Depression increases the risk of hypertension incidence: a meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies.

TL;DR: It is found that depression increased the risk of hypertension incidence and the risk was significantly correlated with the length of follow-up and the prevalence of depression at baseline, suggesting that depression is probably an independent risk factor of hypertension.
Journal ArticleDOI

Depression, comorbid anxiety disorders, and heart rate variability in physically healthy, unmedicated patients: implications for cardiovascular risk.

TL;DR: To determine in physically healthy, unmedicated patients whether heart rate variability is reduced in major depressive disorder relative to controls, and whether HRV reductions are driven by MDD alone, comorbid generalized anxiety disorder (GAD, characterized by anxious anticipation), or comorbrid panic and posttraumatic stress disorders (PD/PTSD, characterize by anxious arousal).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: The implicit association test.

TL;DR: An implicit association test (IAT) measures differential association of 2 target concepts with an attribute when instructions oblige highly associated categories to share a response key, and performance is faster than when less associated categories share a key.
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