Psychocardiology - Heart & Mind Link
- Studies interplay between psychological factors & cardiovascular disease (CVD).
- Key Psychological Risk Factors:
- Depression, anxiety disorders (e.g., GAD, Panic).
- Chronic stress, PTSD.
- Type D Personality (distressed: negative affectivity + social inhibition).
- Impact: ↑ CVD incidence & prevalence, poorer prognosis, ↑ cardiac events & mortality.
- Mechanisms:
- Behavioral: Smoking, poor diet, sedentary lifestyle, medication non-adherence.
- Physiological: HPA axis dysregulation, ↑ inflammation (e.g., CRP), autonomic dysfunction, endothelial dysfunction.
⭐ Depression after Myocardial Infarction (MI) significantly increases risk of re-infarction and mortality by 2-2.5 times.
Psychocardiology - Shrink-ing Hearts
- Examines interplay between psychological factors & cardiovascular health (mind-heart connection).
- Key psychological risk factors:
- Depression: ↑ CVD risk & mortality.
- Anxiety disorders: can mimic or exacerbate cardiac symptoms.
- Chronic stress: contributes via HPA axis, inflammation.
- Type D Personality (distressed): negative affectivity, social inhibition.
- Mechanisms: Autonomic dysfunction, ↑ inflammatory markers (e.g., CRP, IL-6), endothelial dysfunction, unhealthy lifestyle choices.
- Specific links:
- Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (stress-induced).
- Post-MI depression (affects ~20% of patients, worsens prognosis).
- Management: Screening, psychotherapy (CBT), psychopharmacology (e.g., SSRIs generally safe post-MI).

⭐ Depression is an independent risk factor for developing coronary artery disease and is associated with poorer outcomes and increased mortality post-myocardial infarction (MI).
Psychocardiology - Psyche Meds, Heart Effects
- Antipsychotics (APs)
- QTc Prolongation:
- High risk: Thioridazine, Ziprasidone, IV Haloperidol.
- Monitor ECG.
- Orthostatic Hypotension:
- Low-potency FGAs (Chlorpromazine), Risperidone, Clozapine.
- Myocarditis:
- ⚠️ Clozapine (baseline/regular ECG, Troponin, CRP).
- Tachycardia: Clozapine, Olanzapine.
- QTc Prolongation:
- Antidepressants
- TCAs (e.g., Amitriptyline):
- QTc prolongation, orthostatic hypotension, arrhythmias.
- 📌 Tri-Cyclics = Tri-Cardiac effects.
- SSRIs:
- Citalopram (max 40mg), Escitalopram (max 20mg) → QTc prolongation.
- SNRIs (Venlafaxine): ↑BP, ↑HR.
- TCAs (e.g., Amitriptyline):
- Mood Stabilizers
- Lithium: T-wave changes, bradycardia, SA dysfunction.
- Carbamazepine: Bradycardia, AV block.
- Stimulants
- Methylphenidate, Amphetamine: ↑BP, ↑HR.
⭐ Clozapine carries a risk of myocarditis, typically in first 2 months of treatment; monitor with ECG, troponin, and CRP.
Psychocardiology - Broken Hearts, Troubled Minds
- Bidirectional link: heart disease ↔ mental health. Focus: psychiatric sequelae in cardiac patients.
- Common: Depression (20-40% post-MI), Anxiety (GAD, Panic), PTSD (post-MI/CABG), Delirium.
- Impact: ↑ morbidity & mortality, ↓ QoL & adherence.
- Key Syndromes:
- Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy ("Broken Heart Syndrome"): Acute stress-induced.
- Type D Personality: Negative affectivity, social inhibition → poor cardiac prognosis.
- Management: Screening, psychotherapy (CBT), SSRIs (cardiac safety crucial), lifestyle changes.
⭐ Depression is an independent risk factor for adverse cardiovascular outcomes in patients with established heart disease.
Psychocardiology - Healing Heart & Soul
- Interface of cardiology & psychiatry; manages psychological distress in cardiac patients.
- Common conditions: Depression (post-MI), anxiety disorders, Type D personality (distressed).
- Impact: Affects medication adherence, Quality of Life (QoL), morbidity, & mortality.
- Management:
- Pharmacotherapy: SSRIs (e.g., Sertraline, Escitalopram) generally safe.
- Psychotherapy: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), supportive therapy.
- Lifestyle: Stress management, cardiac rehabilitation.
⭐ Depression is an independent risk factor for adverse cardiovascular outcomes, including mortality, especially post-Myocardial Infarction (MI).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Depression is an independent risk factor for CAD and worsens post-MI prognosis.
- Anxiety disorders, especially panic disorder, can mimic cardiac symptoms.
- SSRIs (e.g., Sertraline) are first-line antidepressants in cardiac patients due to cardiac safety.
- TCAs and some antipsychotics risk QTc prolongation and arrhythmias.
- Takotsubo cardiomyopathy is precipitated by intense emotional/physical stress.
- Type D personality (negative affectivity, social inhibition) is linked to poorer cardiovascular outcomes.
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