Is low diastolic blood pressure associated with increased depressive symptoms in older men?
Low diastolic blood pressure is independently associated with higher depressive symptom scores and categorical depression in older men.
OBJECTIVE: To determine if an association exists between low blood pressure and depressive symptoms in older men living in the community. DESIGN: Cross sectional, population based study. SETTING: Town of Rancho Bernardo, California, United States. SUBJECTS: 846 men aged 60-89 years. Comparisons between hypotensive, normotensive, and hypertensive groups were limited to 594 men not taking drugs for hypertension. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Mean scores on Beck depression inventory and prevalence of scores > or = 13. RESULTS: Men with diastolic blood pressure or = 13; P 85 mm Hg had higher depression scores than men with intermediate blood pressure levels (mean scores 5.85 v 4.96; P < 0.05). Men with diastolic hypotension scored significantly higher on both affective and somatic item subscales of the Beck depression inventory and on individual measures of fatigue, pessimism, sadness, loss of appetite, weight loss, and preoccupation with health. Low diastolic blood pressure was a significant predictor of both mean depression score and prevalence of categorical depression, independent of age and change in weight since the baseline visit. The presence of several chronic diseases was associated with depressed mood and higher blood pressure but not with low blood pressure. CONCLUSION: The association of relatively low diastolic blood pressure with higher depressive symptom scores and rates of categorical depression was independent of age or weight loss. Since fatigue is a prominent symptom of depression, any association of low blood pressure with fatigue could reflect depressive disorders or clinically important depression.
Barrett‐Connor et al. (Sat,) studied this question.