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Published online before print October 17, 2007
Psychosom Med 2007, doi:10.1097/PSY.0b013e31815743ca
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© 2007 by American Psychosomatic Society

Original Article


Received April 3, 2007
Returned for revision June 24, 2007

Differential Association of Cognitive and Somatic Depressive Symptoms With Heart Rate Variability in Patients With Stable Coronary Heart Disease: Findings From the Heart and Soul Study

Peter de Jonge , PhD, Dennis Mangano , PhD, MD, Mary A. Whooley , MD


Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Peter de Jonge, PhD, E-mail: p.de.jonge{at}med.umcg.nl.


   Abstract

Objective: To determine if depression associated with low heart rate variability (HRV) in patients post myocardial infarction (MI), but not in patients with stable coronary heart disease (CHD), may be the result of differential associations of somatic and cognitive depressive symptoms with HRV. Methods: To examine the association of somatic and cognitive depressive symptoms with 24-hour HRV, we performed a cross-sectional study of 863 outpatients with stable CHD. The severity of somatic and cognitive depressive symptoms was determined using factor analysis of items of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). Time-domain (SDNN, SDANN) and frequency-domain (VLF, LF, HF, WBF) indices of HRV were derived using ambulatory monitoring. Results: Unadjusted analyses revealed that somatic symptom scores were significantly associated with HRV (r = -.09 for SDNN; r = -.08 for SDANN; r = -.08 for LnVLF; r = -.08 for LnLF; r = -.10 for LnHF; r = -.08 for LnWBF). After adjustment for demographic variables, comorbidities, and lifestyle factors, somatic symptom scores were no longer associated with lower HRV, with the possible exception of LnWBF (r = -.06). Cognitive depressive symptom scores were not associated with HRV using either unadjusted or adjusted analyses. Conclusions: We found that somatic depressive symptoms were associated with lower HRV, although cognitive depressive symptoms were not. The inverse association of somatic symptoms with HRV was largely explained by differences in comorbidities and lifestyle factors. These results suggest that individual symptoms of depression may have differential associations with HRV.

Key Words: depression, heart rate variability, coronary heart disease







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Copyright © 2007 by the American Psychosomatic Society