Post-traumatic stress disorder among heart disease patients: a clinical follow-up of individuals with myocardial infarction in the Tromsø Study
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/32424Date
2023-12-12Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Lorem, Geir Fagerjord; Næss, Eva Therese; Løchen, Maja-Lisa; Lillevoll, Kjersti Rønningen; Molund, Else-Marie; Rösner, Assami; Lindkvist, Sigmund; Schirmer, HenrikAbstract
Method This is epidemiological research with a cross-sectional design following up participants from the Tromsø Study with a confirmed diagnosis of myocardial infarction. We sent invitations to participants in the Tromsø Study with clinically significant self-reported anxiety or depression symptoms following myocardial infarction. A cross-sectional sample of N=79 participants (61 men and 18 women) was collected. During an interview, participants completed the Stressful Life Events Screening Questionnaire and the PTSD checklist PCL-5.
Results We found nine participants (11.6%) with probable PTSD. This was significantly higher than the postulated population prevalence in Norway (p<0.015). We found no direct association between myocardial infarction as illness trauma and symptom levels (p=0.123). However, we found a significant linear trend (p=0.002), indicating that symptom severity increased proportionately as the number of post-traumatic events increased.
Conclusion PTSD prevalence in myocardial infarction patients was related to lifetime exposure to traumatic events, not the myocardial infarction event alone. More research is required to examine the interaction between myocardial infarction and PTSD. Clinicians should be aware that anxiety or depression symptoms after MI could be secondary symptoms of PTSD.