Chronic emotional stress and mediating role of Interleukine-6 in the association with cardiometabolic disorders in a multiethnic middle-aged and older US-population

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Introduction

Chronic emotional stress is a well-recognized risk factor for psychiatric and cardiometabolic disorders. The mediating role of low-grade inflammation in older, ethnically diverse populations has never been studied.

Methods

The multiethnic ≥ 50-year-old study population is a subset of the Health and Aging Brain Study: Health Disparities (HABS-HD) study. Adjusted logistic and linear regression were used to assess associations. Statistical mediation analysis with non-parametric bootstrapping was used to determine the intermediate role of Interleukine-6 (IL-6).

Results

The study included 2,173 participants (50-92 years). Hispanic and Black participants disclosed higher chronic stress levels than White participants. Having a chronic stress total score ≥ six points is associated with 53% higher odds of disclosing concomitant cardiovascular disease (CVD) (adj.OR=1.53 [1.1-2.53]), 31% of Type-2 diabetes (T2DM) (adj.OR=1.31[1.06-1.62]), 23% of hypertension (adj.OR=1.23 [1.02-1.49]), and 30% obesity (adj.OR=1.3[1.09-1.55]). These associations were statistically mediated by IL-6 (12% ( p-value FDR =0.012) of the association with CVD, 17% T2DM ( p-value FDR <0.001), 18% hypertension ( p-value FDR <0.001), and 29% obesity ( p-value FDR =0.005)).

Conclusions

The study highlights a further aspect of the pathophysiological mechanisms involved in brain-body communication. While IL-6 partially explains statistical associations between chronic emotional stress and major cardiometabolic disorders, potential causal effects need to be explored in larger longitudinal studies.

Article activity feed