Systemic inflammation mediates the association between environmental tobacco smoke and depressive symptoms: A cross-sectional study of NHANES 2009-2018

被引:4
|
作者
Ma, Guochen [1 ,2 ]
Tian, Ye [1 ,2 ]
Zi, Jing [1 ,2 ]
Hu, Yifan [1 ,2 ]
Li, Haoqi [1 ,2 ]
Zeng, Yaxian [1 ,2 ]
Luo, Hang [1 ,2 ]
Xiong, Jingyuan [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Sichuan Univ, West China Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Occupat & Environm Hlth, Chengdu 610041, Peoples R China
[2] Sichuan Univ, West China Hosp 4, Chengdu 610041, Peoples R China
[3] Sichuan Univ, Hlth Food Evaluat Res Ctr, West China Sch Publ Hlth, Chengdu 610041, Peoples R China
[4] Food Safety Monitoring & Risk Assessment, Key Lab Sichuan Prov, Chengdu 610041, Peoples R China
[5] Sichuan Univ, West China Sch Publ Hlth, 16 Renminnan Rd,3rd Sect, Chengdu 610041, Peoples R China
关键词
Environmental tobacco smoke; Cotinine; Depressive symptoms; Inflammation; SII; DII; EXPRESSION; PATTERNS; EXPOSURE; COTININE; DIETARY; IMMUNE; STRESS; HEALTH; INDEX; BRAIN;
D O I
10.1016/j.jad.2023.12.060
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Depression is associated with both environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) and inflammation. However, whether systemic inflammation mediates the ETS-depression relationship is unclear. Methods: We analyzed 19,612 participants from the 2009-2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (representing approximately 206,284,711 USA individuals), utilizing data of depressive symptoms (assessed by Patient Health Questionnaire-9), blood cotinine level (an ETS biomarker), dietary inflammatory index (DII, assessed by 24-h dietary recall) and inflammation, represented by immune-inflammation index (SII) and systemic inflammation response index (SIRI). Results: Weighted multivariable logistic regression showed that a higher blood cotinine level is significantly associated with a higher depressive symptoms risk (OR = 1.79, 1.35-2.38). After adjusting for covariates, the effect in smokers (OR = 1.220, 95 % CI: 1.140-1.309) is larger than that in non-smokers (OR = 1.150, 95 % CI: 1.009-1.318). Compared to the lowest level, depressive symptoms risks in participants with the highest level of SII, SIRI and DII are 19 % (OR = 1.19, 1.05-1.35), 15 % (OR = 1.15, 1.01-1.31) and 88 % (OR = 1.88, 1.48-2.39) higher, respectively. Weighted linear regression demonstrated positive correlations of SII (8 = 0.004, 0.001-0.006), SIRI (8 = 0.009, 0.005-0.012) and DII (8 = 0.213, 0.187-0.240) with blood cotinine level. Restricted cubic splines model showed a linear dose-response relationship between blood cotinine and depressive symptoms (Pnon-linear = 0.410), with decreasing risk for lower DII. And SII and SIRI respectively mediate 0.21 % and 0.1 % of the association between blood cotinine and depressive symptoms. Limitation: Cross-sectional design, and lack of medication data for depression. Conclusions: Positive association of ETS (blood cotinine) with depressive symptoms risk is partly mediated by systemic inflammation, and anti-inflammatory diet could be beneficial.
引用
收藏
页码:152 / 159
页数:8
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