Published online before print
December 13, 2006, 10.1097/01.psy.0000249733.33811.00
Heart Rate Turbulence, Depression, and Survival After Acute Myocardial Infarction
Robert M. Carney, PhD,
William B. Howells, MS,
James A. Blumenthal, PhD,
Kenneth E. Freedland, PhD,
Phyllis K. Stein, PhD,
Lisa F. Berkman, PhD,
Lana L. Watkins, PhD,
Susan M. Czajkowski, PhD,
Brian Steinmeyer, MS,
Junichiro Hayano, MD,
Peter P. Domitrovich, PhD,
Matthew M. Burg, PhD and
Allan S. Jaffe, MD
From the Departments of Psychiatry (R.M.C., W.B.H., J.A.B., K.E.F., L.L.W., B.S.), Medicine (P.K.S., J.H., P.P.D., M.M.B., A.S.J.), and Epidemiology (L.F.B.), Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO (R.M.C., W.B.H., K.E.F., P.K.S., B.S., P.P.D.); Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC (J.A.B., L.L.W.); Harvard University, Boston MA (L.F.B.); National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, MD (S.M.C.); Nagoya City University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Nagoya, Japan (J.H.); Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, and Columbia University School of Medicine, New York, NY (M.M.B.); and the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN (A.S.J.).
Copyright © 2007 by the American Psychosomatic Society