Publication | Open Access
What about heart and mind in the COVID-19 era?
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2021
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesPost-traumatic Stress DisorderMental HealthCovid-19Mental DisordersComorbid Psychiatric DisorderHippocratic MedicinePublic HealthPsychiatryGlobal Health CrisisCovid-19 PandemicSocial StressEpidemiologyCardiovascular DiseaseCovid-19 EraGlobal HealthHeart-brain InteractionsMedicineAnxiety DisordersPsychopathologyEmergency MedicinePhilosophy Of MindComorbidity
From the time of Hippocratic medicine, heart-brain interactions have been recognized and contributed to both mental and physical health. Heart-brain interactions are complex and multifaceted and appear to be bidirectional. Exposure to chronic and daily stressors such as quarantine, or severe psychological trauma like a significant person in danger of life can affect the cardiovascular system and the emotional experience of the individual, leading to an increased risk of developing a cardiovascular disease or mental illness. Subjects with comorbidities between mental disorders and heart diseases are obviously more susceptible to be influenced by emotional burden due to the spread of COVID-19, with emotional responses characterized by fear, panic, anger, frustration. Psychological services and crisis interventions are needed at an early stage to reduce anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder in such a stressful period, with a special attention to special groups of patients, such as women, children, or the elderly.