Depressive symptom dimensions and cardiac prognosis following myocardial infarction: results from the ENRICHD clinical trial
Bekke-Hansen S, Trockel M, Burg M, Taylor C. Depressive symptom dimensions and cardiac prognosis following myocardial infarction: results from the ENRICHD clinical trial. Psychological Medicine 2011, 42: 51-60. PMID: 21682949, DOI: 10.1017/s0033291711001000.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsCardiovascular DiseasesCognitive Behavioral TherapyComorbidityDepressive DisorderFemaleHumansMaleMiddle AgedMyocardial InfarctionPrincipal Component AnalysisPrognosisProportional Hazards ModelsPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesRecurrenceRisk FactorsSeverity of Illness IndexSocial IsolationSocial SupportTime FactorsConceptsDepressive symptom dimensionsMyocardial infarctionSomatic depressive symptomsDepressive symptomsCardiovascular mortalityCardiac prognosisClinical trialsSubsequent mortalitySymptom dimensionsCoronary Heart Disease (ENRICHD) clinical trialRecurrent non-fatal myocardial infarctionBeck Depression Inventory itemsNon-fatal myocardial infarctionBonferroni correctionEarly cardiac morbidityAcute myocardial infarctionSomatic symptom severityCardiac morbidityCardiovascular morbidityCause mortalityInitial infarctionCox regressionEnhancing RecoveryPsychosocial interventionsSignificant associationThe Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease Patients (ENRICHD) Study.
Burg M, Czajkowski S. The Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease Patients (ENRICHD) Study. 2011, 381-400. DOI: 10.1037/13086-019.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchEvent-free survivalAcute myocardial infarctionClinical trialsEnhancing RecoveryReduced event-free survivalStrong epidemiologic evidenceRisk of reinfarctionCoronary heart diseaseFuture clinical trialsPatient studiesLow social supportSocial supportCardiologic careEpidemiologic evidenceBlood InstituteMyocardial infarctionNational HeartHeart diseaseSurvival ratePatientsSecondary findingsComparable populationsENRICHDTrialsDepression