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P-234 - an Effect of Personality Disorders on Cardiovascular Diseases’ Courses
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2020
Abstract
To investigate an effect of personality disorders dynamics on manifestation, clinical presentation and disease course of cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Materials and methods 307 inpatients (192 female, 115 male; mean age 58,3 ± 4,2 years) with Arterial Hypertension (AH), Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) and Atrial Fibrillation (AF) were examined. Main methods were clinico-psychopathological (including catamnesis data), pathopsychological and clinico-instrumental.
Two groups of patients were defined. in the first group (191 patients, 66,5% female, mean age 57,4 ± 2,1 years; mean CVD duration 9,4 ± 3,1 years) clinical course of CVD is subjected to the dynamics of personality disorder. Psychosomatic (synergistic) type of clinical course of CVD is characterized by reactive somatopsychic lability, CVD manifestation at the time of stressful situation, CVD symptoms redoubling carried out by somatoform disorders. CVD exacerbations correlate with psychogenic depressive phases andor climacterial period with involutional hysteria. in most cases (73,8%) further CVD dynamics is characterized by hypochondriacal personality development. in the second group (116 patients, 69% female, mean age 58,4 ± 1,5 years; mean CVD duration 9,1 ± 2,3 years) clinical course of CVD doesn’t correlate with dynamics of personality disorder. Alternating type of clinical course of CVD is characterized by hereditary and somatogenic factors.
Our findings allow to explain contradictory results received in studies of reciprocal influence of personality disorders and CVD. Obtained data is of great practical importance and show the necessity of differentiated approach in complex (somato- and psychotropic) treatment of CVD.
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- Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2012
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