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🧠 PDF Prevention Guide · $37

Mental Health & Heart Disease: The Mind-Cardiac Connection

Depression after a heart attack doubles one-year mortality. Loneliness carries the cardiac risk equivalent of smoking 15 cigarettes daily. This guide covers 5 psychological conditions with established cardiovascular impact, the biology connecting them, and the interventions that treat both simultaneously.

✓ 4 pages✓ 5 psychological conditions✓ Post-MI depression✓ Cardiac-safe SSRIs✓ PDF download
$37
One-time purchase · Instant PDF download
  • Depression, anxiety, chronic stress, PTSD, and social isolation — CVD risk for each
  • Post-MI depression: how common, why dangerous, how to treat it
  • Biological mechanisms: HPA axis, autonomic dysregulation, platelet hyperreactivity
  • Cardiac-safe antidepressants — SSRIs vs. TCAs
  • CBT and exercise as dual mental-cardiac interventions
  • PHQ-9 screening and what scores mean
Get Mental Health-Heart Guide — $37
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Psychological health is cardiovascular health — the biology is inseparable

Cardiology training historically focused on arteries, valves, and rhythms — the physical substrate of heart disease. But depression, anxiety, chronic stress, and loneliness each have measurable biological effects on the cardiovascular system: elevated cortisol, reduced heart rate variability, platelet hyperreactivity, and systemic inflammation. These are not abstract connections. They are mechanistic pathways that drive real events.

This guide provides the integrated framework for understanding and addressing psychological cardiac risk — covering the magnitude of each condition's effect, the biology behind it, and the interventions that help both mind and heart.

What’s inside

2x
Post-MI Mortality
Depression after myocardial infarction doubles one-year cardiovascular mortality
27%
CAD Risk Increase
Depression increases incident coronary artery disease risk by approximately 27%
32%
Stroke Risk
Social isolation and loneliness associated with 26-32% increased stroke and CHD risk

“Depression after a heart attack does not make someone weak. It is a physiological response to a physiological crisis — and it is one of the most powerful predictors of who will have a second event. The heart and the mind are one system in cardiology, and I treat both.”

CN
Dr. Christabel Nyange, MD, MPH, FACC
Founder, ElinMed · Board-Certified Cardiologist

Common Questions

Is it normal to feel depressed or anxious after a cardiac event?
Very common — approximately 20% of patients develop clinically significant depression after a heart attack, and anxiety about physical exertion (fear of triggering another event) is even more prevalent. These are not signs of weakness or poor coping. They are recognized physiological responses with specific biological mechanisms. They also significantly worsen cardiac prognosis if untreated. Asking Dr. Nyange for a PHQ-9 screening at your cardiac visit is entirely appropriate.
Are antidepressants safe for cardiac patients?
SSRIs (sertraline, escitalopram, citalopram) are safe and effective in cardiac patients and are the first-line choice. Sertraline is the most studied post-MI antidepressant. Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) including amitriptyline and nortriptyline should be avoided — they cause QT prolongation, arrhythmia risk, and anticholinergic effects that are problematic in cardiac patients. SNRIs are generally acceptable. Always confirm with both Dr. Nyange and your mental health provider.
Can exercise treat depression in cardiac patients?
Yes — aerobic exercise has antidepressant effects comparable to medication in mild-to-moderate depression, with the added benefit of directly improving cardiovascular outcomes. Cardiac rehabilitation, which combines supervised exercise with peer support and education, has been shown to significantly reduce post-cardiac depression and anxiety. It is the most powerful single intervention for both mental and cardiac health after a cardiac event.

Your emotional health is your cardiac health.

The guide that treats the whole person — not just the arteries.

Get Mental Health-Heart Guide — $37