Depression ties marital strain to
cardiovascular risks in women, not men
Women in strained marriages are more likely to feel depressed
and suffer high blood pressure, obesity and other signs of metabolic syndrome"
University of Utah psychologists found. The same study found men in strained marriages
also are more likely to feel depressed, yet - unlike women -do not face an increased
risk of metabolic syndrome.
"We hypothesized that negative aspects of marriages
like arguing and being angry would be associated with higher levels of metabolic
syndrome," says the study's first author, Nancy Henry, a doctoral student
in psychology. "We further anticipated that this relationship would be at
least partly due to depressive symptoms."
"In other words, those who reported experiencing
more conflict, hostility and disagreement with their spouses would more depressed,
which in turn would be associated with a higher risk of heart disease due to metabolic
syndrome," she adds
"We found this was true for wives in this study,
but not for husbands," says Henry, who presented the findings Thursday, March
5 in Chicago during the American Psychosomatic Society's annual meeting.
"The gender difference is important because heart
disease is the number-one killer of women as well as men, and we are still learning
a lot about how relationship factors and emotional distress are related to heart
disease," she says.
Does the study suggest women should avoid men to reduce
heart disease risks? "We know they should," jokes Tim Smith, a psychology
professor and study co-author who heads a larger University of Utah study of the
role of marriage quality in heart disease. The new study is part of the larger
effort.
Smith, turning serious, says: "The reason you have
to be careful about 'what does it mean?' is that this study is a simple, preliminary
test of what might be unhealthy about relationships for women."
"There is good evidence they [women] should modify
some of the things that affect metabolic syndrome - like diet and exercise - but
it's a little premature to say they would lower their risk of heart disease if
they improved the tone and quality of their marriages - or dumped their husbands,"
he says.
Other data from the larger study indicate "that
a history of divorce is associated with coronary disease," he adds, noting
the researchers are pursuing the hypothesis that improving marriage might improve
health.
"The immediate implication is that if you are interested
in your cardiovascular risk -and we all should be because it is the leading killer
for both genders - we should be concerned about not just traditional risk factors
[such as blood pressure and cholesterol] but the quality of our emotional and
family lives," Smith says.
In addition to possible health benefits, more immediate
benefits include "getting along better and enjoying each other more, improving
your mood," he says.
"Strained marriages can increase your risk of heart
disease, and that may in part be because strained marriages increase the risk
of metabolic syndrome and thus heart disease," Smith says. "The reason
strained marriages might be related to metabolic syndrome is that strained marriages
can be depressing, and depression is then the link to metabolic syndrome."
Smith says the endocrinology of depression's psychological
stress may explain why the five risk factors that comprise metabolic syndrome
fit together.
He hypothesizes that perhaps "the hormonal effects
of stress are why you are depositing fat [around the waist], why your insulin
resistance goes up, why your lipids and blood pressure get out of whack. Part
of the reason these things may be clumping together is because they are part of
an unhealthy body response to stress."
Henry and Smith conducted the new study with University
of Utah psychologists Jonathan Butner, an associate professor; Bert Uchino, a
professor; and Cynthia Berg, a professor and chair of the university's Department
of Psychology.
For their wider study, the psychologists used the Dan
Jones & Associates polling firm and newspaper ads during 2001-2005 to recruit
276 couples, who were married an average of 20 years and from ages 40 to 70.
Each couple filled out several questionnaires for both
the encompassing study and for Henry's study. The questionnaires included 10 scales:
three to assess positive aspects of marriage quality, such as mutual support,
emotional warmth and friendliness, and confiding in each other; three scales to
measure negative aspects of marital quality such as arguments, feelings of hostility
and extent of disagreement over various topics such as kids, sex, money and in-laws;
and four scales to gauge symptoms of depression.
Each couple also went to a university clinic, where their
waists and blood pressure were measured and they were given lab tests for "good"
cholesterol, fasting glucose and triglycerides. Together, those data determined
if a study participant had metabolic syndrome. They also underwent a screening
test designed to exclude any couple that already had cardiovascular disease.
The findings:
- Women who reported more marital strain were more likely to also report depressive
symptoms, Henry says.
- "Women who reported more marital strain had more metabolic syndrome
symptoms, and that association can be explained by the fact they also reported
more depressive symptoms," says Smith.
- "Men in bad marriages also reported more depression, but neither marital
strain nor depression was related to their levels of metabolic syndrome,"
he adds
"We know from previous research that women are more
sensitive and responsive to relationship problems than men," Henry says.
"The results of this study suggest those problems could harm their health.
Understanding the emotional and relationship health of couples can be an important
overall factor in understanding physical health. Improving aspects of intimate
relationships might help your emotional and physical well-being."
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