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THE MIND REACTS TO THE HEART DISEASE: LOW MOOD
At times, the distinction between sadness and low mood is blurred; both can be present simultaneously. Your mood goes down when you have the feeling that the world is “on top” of you, rather than the reverse. Instead of being “on top of the world,” you think you have lost control of your life. This feeling of not being capable, of incapacity, is linked with low mood or unhappiness. In the early stages of the recovery from a cardiac event like heart attack, this feeling is common and can be quite normal. When your ability to engage in normal activities or work seems threatened, it is not surprising that you feel frustration and unhappiness.
How bad does it get How long does the low mood go on These are questions we always ask, as for the CAD patient it seems that some forms of depression are linked to cardiac outcome. The problem is sorting out what is a “normal” depression, about which one can be reassured, and what is more serious depression, which will need specific treatment.
The main qualifiers in assessing depression are severity and persistence. Some people seem to have an unhappiness that is not severe but appears to go on and on, a condition we call persistent low mood. We don’t fully understand this, but it may be related to mood states that occurred prior to the cardiac event. More commonly patients experience normal periods of sadness relating to what has happened to them, and low mood relating to feelings of incapacity. Over time, these feelings will subside; flare-ups, though, are to be expected. As you will see, depression and fatigue is a pattern that is now being better recognized
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October 15, 2009 Post Under Cardio & Blood - Read More

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