Back to Search Start Over

Beta-blockers and depression in elderly hypertension patients in primary care

Authors :
Lianne Ringoir
Pedersen, Susanne S.
Widdershoven, Jos W. M. G.
Frans Pouwer
Keyzer, Josephine M. L.
Romeijnders, Arnold C.
Pop, Victor J. M.
Medical and Clinical Psychology
Source :
Ringoir, L, Pedersen, S S, Widdershoven, J W M G, Pouwer, F, Keyzer, J M L, Romeijnders, A C & Pop, V J M 2014, ' Beta-blockers and depression in elderly hypertension patients in primary care ', Family Medicine, vol. 46, no. 6, pp. 447-453 ., University of Southern Denmark, Family Medicine, 46(6), 447-453. Society of Teachers of Family Medicine
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Previous findings regarding a possible association between beta-blocker use and depression are mixed. To our knowledge there have been no studies investigating the association of beta-blockers with depression in primary care hypertension patients without previous myocardial infarction. The aim of this study was to determine the relation between lipophilic beta-blocker use and depression in elderly primary care patients with hypertension.METHODS: This was a cross-sectional study in primary care practices located in the South of The Netherlands. Primary care hypertension patients without previous myocardial infarction or heart failure (n=573), aged between 60 and 85 years (mean age=70±6.6), were included. All patients underwent a structured interview that included a self-report questionnaire to assess depression (PHQ-9), which was divided in four groups (PHQ-9 score of 0, 1--3, 4--8, 9 or higher).RESULTS: A PHQ-9 score of 0 was more prevalent in non-beta-blocker users versus lipophilic beta-blocker users (46% versus 35%), a PHQ-9 score of 4--8 was less prevalent in non-beta-blocker users as compared with lipophilic beta-blocker users (14% versus 25%). A chi-squared test showed that lipophilic beta-blocker users as compared to non-beta-blockers users were more likely to be in a higher depression category. Ordinal regression showed a significant relationship between use of lipophilic beta-blockers and depression (OR=1.60, 95% CI=1.08--2.36) when adjusting for potential confounders.CONCLUSIONS: Our findings show that primary care hypertension patients who use a lipophilic beta-blocker are more likely to have higher depression scores than those who do not use a lipophilic beta-blocker.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07423225
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ringoir, L, Pedersen, S S, Widdershoven, J W M G, Pouwer, F, Keyzer, J M L, Romeijnders, A C & Pop, V J M 2014, ' Beta-blockers and depression in elderly hypertension patients in primary care ', Family Medicine, vol. 46, no. 6, pp. 447-453 ., University of Southern Denmark, Family Medicine, 46(6), 447-453. Society of Teachers of Family Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..167bc7b42c5ba5cf5dbf982f6498d2ee