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Cytokine associated with severity of depressive symptoms in female nurses in Korea

Title
Cytokine associated with severity of depressive symptoms in female nurses in Korea
Authors
Kim, YoonjooPang, YangheePark, HyunkiKim, OksooLee, Hyangkyu
Ewha Authors
김옥수
SCOPUS Author ID
김옥수scopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
ISSN
2296-2565JCR Link
Citation
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH vol. 11
Keywords
cytokinedepressionKoreageneralized gamma regressionnurse
Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Indexed
SCIE; SSCI; SCOPUS WOS
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Background Depression has been associated with the risk of developing physical illnesses and diseases. Inflammatory hypotheses of immunoactive and dysregulated cytokine production have been proposed to describe this association; however, data pertaining to the high prevalence of depression among nurses are limited.Objective This study aimed to use a comprehensive immune-profiling approach to determine whether an abnormal profile of circulating cytokines could be identified in nurses with self-reported depression and whether this profile is associated with the severity of depression.Methods We investigated a cohort of 157 female nurses in Korea. The self-report Patient Health Questionnaire was used to measure the depression levels of nurses. In addition, peripheral blood samples were collected and used to measure the cytokine profile using the Luminex multiplexing system. Generalized gamma regression analyses were conducted to evaluate the association between cytokine and depressive symptoms.Results Regarding severity of depressive symptoms, 28.0% of nurses had moderately severe depression while 9.6% had severe depression. Moderately-severe depressive symptoms in nurses were associated with elevated levels of interleukin-6 (B = 0.460, p = 0.003), interleukin-8 (B = 0.273, p = 0.001), and interleukin-18 (B = 0.236, p = 0.023), whereas interferon-gamma levels (B = -0.585, p = 0.003) showed the opposite profile. Participants with severe depressive symptoms presented decreased interferon-gamma levels (B = -1.254, p < 0.001).Conclusion This study demonstrated that proinflammatory cytokines were associated with depression among nurses. This calls for early detection and intervention, considering the mechanisms linking depression to physical illness and disease.
DOI
10.3389/fpubh.2023.1194519
Appears in Collections:
간호대학 > 간호학전공 > Journal papers
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