Sex and Psychosocial Differences in Acute Stress Symptoms Prior to Open-Heart Surgery

Int J Behav Med. 2024 May 10. doi: 10.1007/s12529-024-10287-1. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: Acute stress symptoms can occur while cardiac patients await open-heart surgery (OHS). The distress leads to poor outcomes. This study aimed to investigate the association of sex and psychosocial factors (quality-of-life and character strengths).

Method: Our study cohort included 481 pre-OHS patients (female 42%; mean age 62 years). Medical indices/factors were obtained from the Society of Thoracic Surgeon's national database. Multiple regression analyses were performed following pre-planned steps and adjusting medical factors.

Results: Our findings revealed that sex differences in trauma-related symptoms were associated with poor mental well-being, alongside comorbidities. Both mental well-being and comorbidity factors were directly related to acute stress symptoms, while dispositional optimism had an inverse association with this outcome.

Conclusion: To improve OHS outcomes, our findings suggest healthcare providers be attentive to pre-OHS acute stress symptoms, pay greater attention to the emotional well-being of their female patients, and develop supportive interventions to enhance personality strengths.

Keywords: Acute stress symptoms/posttraumatic stress symptoms; Dispositional optimism; Medical comorbidities; Open-heart surgery; Quality-of-life; Sex differences.