|
Anxiety Bad for Heart
'Pakistan Times' Health Desk
Researchers reported Monday that chronic anxiety can significantly increase
the risk of a heart attack, at least in men. The findings add another trait
to a growing list of psychological profiles linked to heart disease,
including anger or hostility, Type A behaviour and depression.
"There's a connection between the heart and head," said Dr. Nieca Goldberg
of the New York University School of Medicine, a spokeswoman for the
American Heart Association who wasn't involved in the study.
"This is very important research because we really are focused very much on
prescribing medicine for cholesterol and lowering blood pressure and
treating diabetes, but we don't look at the psychological aspect of a
patient's care," she added.
Doctors "need to be aggressive about not only taking care of the traditional
risk factors ... but also really getting into their patients' heads."
The research was published Monday by the Journal of the American College of
Cardiology.
Everybody's anxious every now and then. At issue here is not the
understandable sweaty palms before a big speech or nervousness at a party,
but longstanding anxiety — people who are socially withdrawn, fearful,
chronic worriers. It's a glass-half-empty personality.
University of Southern California psychologist Biing-Jiun Shen used data
from a national aging study to estimate the impact of this trait on the
heart.
The Normative Aging Study has tracked 735 men since 1986. They were
heart-healthy at the study's start, have completed extensive psychological
testing, and undergo medical exams every three years. By 2004, there had
been 75 heart attacks among the participants.
Shen tracked men who scored in the top 15 percent of anxiety scales that
measure such things as excessive doubts, social insecurity, phobias and
stress.
Those men deemed chronically anxious were 30 percent to 40 percent more
likely to have had a heart attack than their more easygoing counterparts.
The link remained even when Shen took into account standard heart risk
factors such as cholesterol problems, as well as other heart-negative
personality traits.
Why? After all, a hostile person and an anxious one appear very different,
one outgoing and one timid.
"Although the behaviour is quite different ... if you look at the
physiological response of these people, they're quite similar," Shen said.
"All have raised blood pressure, heart rate, they produce more stress
hormones."
So, would treating anxiety lower the risk? No one knows, cautioned NYU's
Goldberg. That's why these personality traits are considered "markers" for
heart disease, not outright "risk factors" like cholesterol or blood
pressure.● |