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Depression may cause patients to become less
active
Newswise — Feelings of depression could be
one reason patients fail to follow their
doctors’ orders on exercising and eventually
become less physically active, a new
research review finds.
Although past research shows that exercise
improves chronic health conditions, such as
heart disease and diabetes, it also shows
that patients with these conditions often
suffer from depression.
The new analysis evaluated 11 studies
comprising some 20,000 patients.
Eight studies reported that having symptoms
of depression after a coronary event, such
as heart attack, was a significant risk
factor for developing a sedentary lifestyle
or a poor adherence to an exercise regimen
recommended by the patients’ doctor.
The review appears in the July/August issue
of the journal General Hospital
Psychiatry.
One study, for example, investigated the
role of depression and anxiety in 224 heart
attack survivors, at three months and 12
months after their hospitalization.
Of those with anxiety and depression during
hospitalization, 59 percent had a
significant decrease in exercise after three
months, compared with 31 percent of those
who were not depressed.
A year later the gap widened, with 51
percent of depressed patients exercising
less compared with 26 percent of
non-depressed patients.
The studies used different methods to
measure depression and physical activity and
there was a great difference in how they
compared factors such as the patients’
health, physical activity and depression.
There are many suggested theories to explain
why depression leads to a decline in
activity. Babak Roshanaei-Moghaddam, M.D. of
the department of psychiatry and behavioral
sciences at University of Washington in
Seattle and lead author of the study offered
one theory.
“We have hypothesized that there are both
behavioral habits associated with
depression, such as smoking and obesity,
which may then limit exercise motivation and
enjoyment, as well as biologic factors that
can cause obesity and decrease energy level,
exercise tolerance and pain threshold,” he
said.
Evette Joy Ludman, Ph.D., of Seattle-based
Group Health Cooperative, who had no
affiliation with the study, agreed.
“Depression can indeed make people have less
motivation and energy to exercise,” Ludman
said.
“The sad part about this is that physical
activity is not only important for
preventing and managing many chronic
conditions; it can be very helpful for
improving mood and other symptoms of
depression.”
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