The abstract describes a study evaluating the association of early psychiatric morbidity with cardiac outcomes in 92 patients with presumed myocardial infarction, but reports no quantitative results.
Observational (n=92)
We evaluated the association of psychiatric morbidity during the early phase of admission to a coronary care unit with cardiac diagnosis and subsequent morbidity. Ninety-two patients admitted for the first time for presumed myocardial infarction were evaluated within 48 hours of hospitalization. Anxiety and depressive symptoms and cognitive impairment were rated. Data were collected on cardiac diagnosis and morbidity. Three and 12 months after hospitalization, cardiac morbidity, psychiatric symptoms and psychosocial morbidity were assessed.
Legault et al. (Mon,) conducted a observational in Presumed myocardial infarction (n=92). Psychiatric morbidity assessment was evaluated on Cardiac morbidity, psychiatric symptoms and psychosocial morbidity at 3 and 12 months. The abstract describes a study evaluating the association of early psychiatric morbidity with cardiac outcomes in 92 patients with presumed myocardial infarction, but reports no quantitative results.
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