Association between depressive symptom and respiratory health in two prospective cohort studies
Xingjun Chen, Junyu Chen, Shuntao Lin, Hui Chen, Ziting Zhang, Li Wen, Xiaoxi Lu, Guangyan Liu

TL;DR
This study found that fluctuating, increasing, or consistently high depressive symptoms are linked to a higher risk of chronic lung diseases and worse lung function.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel analysis of dynamic depressive symptom trajectories and their specific associations with respiratory health outcomes.
Findings
Fluctuating, increasing, and consistently high depressive symptoms were linked to higher chronic lung disease risk.
These depressive symptom patterns were also associated with lower peak expiratory flow values.
Total and somatic depressive symptoms showed stronger associations with adverse respiratory outcomes.
Abstract
The association between depressive symptoms and respiratory health remains inconclusive, with limited research exploring dynamic changes in overall and symptom-specific depression. This study aimed to investigate the relationship between depressive symptom trajectories and the risk of chronic lung diseases (CLDs) as well as pulmonary function. We used data from two prospective cohorts: the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS) and the Health and Retirement Study (HRS). Depressive symptoms were assessed using the 10-item and 8-item CES-D scales, respectively, at three time points (CHARLS: wave1-3; HRS: wave 5–7), and classified into five trajectories: consistently low, decreasing, fluctuating, increasing, and consistently high. Incident CLDs were identified by self-reported physician diagnoses (CHARLS: wave 4–5; HRS: wave 8–12), and pulmonary function was evaluated by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research · Tryptophan and brain disorders · Asthma and respiratory diseases
