| Abstract |
Objective: To explore the relationship between anxiety and depression in patients with coronary artery bypass grafting. Methods: 130 patients with coronary artery bypass surgery admitted to our hospital from August 2017 to may 2019 were selected and evaluated with the related scale of anxiety, depression and discomfort symptoms. The scores of various discomfort symptoms, the scores of adverse emotions and the correlation between them were compared among 130 patients with coronary artery bypass surgery. Results: the additional symptoms of 130 patients with CABG were headache; the relatively common symptoms were diarrhea, vomiting, nausea, dysuria, numbness of arm, chest pain, palpitation, flatulence, constipation, lack of appetite and fatigue; the most common symptoms were body temperature rise, angina, dizziness, shortness of breath, arm pain, shoulder back pain, sleep disorder, leg cutting The mean total score of discomfort was 47.7231. The lowest mean score of anxiety was (51.39 ± 7.23), and the highest mean score of depression was (52.75 ± 8.42). The total score of discomfort symptom scale was used as independent variable. Through analysis, there was a correlation between depression, anxiety and discomfort symptoms in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery, and the p value was less than 0.05. Conclusion: there is a correlation between anxiety and depression symptoms and discomfort symptoms after CABG. If the more serious the discomfort symptoms, the more bad emotions, we should timely assist with psychological guidance and health education and other means of intervention.
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