Inflammation and the mental state before an acute coronary event

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Abstract

Feelings of exhaustion have been found to belong to the precursors of acute coronary events. Guided by the current views of the pathogenesis of acute coronary syndromes, a two-stage model describing a feedback relationship between mental state and the disease process is presented. According to the presented model prolonged exposure to stress results in a state of exhaustion leading to increased susceptibility to inflammatory diseases. Inflammation, in turn, amplifies feelings of exhaustion and malaise through cytokine release. Results of a study of 15 exhausted and 15 nonexhausted angioplasty patients, showing elevated levels of interleukin-1β and tumour necrosis factor-α in the exhausted patients, give empirical support to this model.

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APA

Appels, A. (1999). Inflammation and the mental state before an acute coronary event. In Annals of Medicine (Vol. 31, pp. 41–44). Royal Society of Medicine Press Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1080/07853890.1999.11904398

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