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Psychological Distress After Sudden Cardiac Arrest and Its Impact on Recovery.

Sachin AgarwalJeffrey L BirkSabine L AbukhadraDanielle A RojasTalea M CorneliusMaja BergmanBernard P ChangDonald E EdmondsonIan M Kronish
Published in: Current cardiology reports (2022)
After CA many patients report high psychological distress, including depression, generalized anxiety, and posttraumatic stress. Emerging evidence suggests that distressed patients' attention may narrow such that anxious awareness of afferent cardiac signals e.g., changes in heart rate or blood pressure, becomes predominant and a cause for concerned, constant monitoring. This cardiac-specific anxiety followed by behavioral avoidance and physiological hyperreactivity may increase patients' already high risk of secondary cardiovascular disease and undermine their health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Unlike other cardiovascular diseases, no clinical practice guidelines exist for assessing or treating psychological sequelae of CA. Future research should identify modifiable psychological targets to reduce secondary cardiovascular disease risk and improve HRQoL.
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