Resilience and lifestyle in patients with acute coronary syndromes: a
prospective one-year follow-up study
Authors
A. Greco
C. De Matteis
E. Cappelletti
L. Pancani
D. Monzani
M. D'Addario
M.E. Magrin
M. Miglioretti
M. Sarini
M. Scrignaro
L. Vecchio
P. Steca
Abstract
The importance of healthy lifestyle and the control of modifiable risk
factors are cardinal aspects of prevention and treatment of cardiovascular diseases (CVD). In
recent decades, several studies have shown that the manifestation and clinical evolution of CVD
are related to a range of negative and positive psychosocial aspects, but research on the
contribution of positive factors to the changes in lifestyle in patients with CVD is notably
absent. Aim of this study was to investigate the predictive role of resilience (i.e., perceived
social support, sense of coherence, self-esteem, optimism, general and disease-specific
self-efficacy), in behavioral changes in acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients, especially for
dietary pattern, physical activity, smoking status and alcohol consumption. Two-hundred and
seventy-five patients (83.3% men; mean age=57.1, SD=8. 0) were enrolled. Psychological factors
and lifestyle were assessed during three measurement points (baseline, 6-month and 12-month
follow-ups). Results from regression analyses showed that disease-specific self-efficacy and
sense of coherence can predict lifestyle improvement after ACS. These findings underline the
importance of working on resilience factors to change lifestyle in patients with
CVD.