INA- sources
According to a recent study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, individuals diagnosed with depression during pregnancy have a higher likelihood of being diagnosed with cardiovascular disease within two years of giving birth compared to those without depression.
It is well known that depression can have detrimental impacts on cardiovascular health in the general population. Research has shown that both men and women who experience depression have a higher likelihood of developing heart disease in the future. Previous research has also revealed that roughly 20% of people go through depression during pregnancy. Despite this, there has been limited investigation into the link between prenatal depression and the increased risk of cardiovascular disease.
“We need to use pregnancy as a window to future health,” said lead study author Christina M. Ackerman-Banks, M.D., an assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology-maternal fetal medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston. “Complications during pregnancy, including prenatal depression, impact long-term cardiovascular health. The postpartum period provides an opportunity to counsel and screen people for cardiovascular disease in order to prevent these outcomes.”
This study is the first population-based study to primarily investigate the relationship between prenatal depression and postpartum cardiovascular disease diagnosis within the first two years postpartum. The research team analyzed data from the Maine Health Data Organization’s All Payer Claims Database for over 100,000 individuals who gave birth in Maine between 2007 and 2019. The researchers aimed to estimate the cumulative risk of new cardiovascular disease diagnoses within two years after delivery.
After adjusting for potential confounding factors such as smoking, age at the time of delivery and pre-pregnancy diabetes, pre-pregnancy depression, pre-pregnancy hypertension, and preeclampsia, the researchers estimated the risk of developing six major cardiovascular conditions — heart failure, ischemic heart disease, arrhythmia/cardiac arrest, cardiomyopathy, stroke, and high blood pressure — within two years of delivery.
The analysis found that the estimated cumulative cardiovascular disease risk for heart failure, ischemic heart disease, cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia/cardiac arrest, or newly diagnosed high blood pressure within two years of delivery was significantly higher for people with depression compared to the people without depression. People with prenatal depression had:
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