Stress-related brain signals drive risk of cardiovascular disease in people with depression and anxiety
The study of 85,551 individuals found those with both depression and anxiety had a 32% higher risk of major cardiovascular events linked to stress-related brain and immune changes.
8 Articles
8 Articles
Stress identified as possible link between depression and heart disease risk: Study
Stress doesn't just weigh on your mind-it can strain your heart too. A large new study from Mass General Brigham has found that people with depression and anxiety face a higher risk of cardiovascular...
Stress-related brain signals drive risk of cardiovascular disease in people with depression and anxiety
Patients with depression are at higher risk of cardiovascular disease, and a new study suggests that stress may help explain why. Research from Mass General Brigham suggests that this increased risk is driven by stress-related brain activity, nervous system dysregulation, and chronic inflammation. They also found that patients with both depression and anxiety were at even higher risk of cardiovascular disease than those diagnosed with just one c…
Depression Quietly Damages the Heart Through Stress Circuits
Depression and anxiety may heighten cardiovascular disease risk through chronic stress pathways in the brain and body. In a large analysis of more than 85,000 adults, those with depression or anxiety — especially both — were significantly more likely to experience heart attack, stroke or heart failure.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium




