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STUDY:
ANGER REALLY CAN KILL
Anger and other strong emotions can trigger potentially deadly
heart rhythms in certain vulnerable people.
Previous studies have shown that earthquakes, war or even the
loss of a World Cup Soccer match can increase rates of death from
sudden cardiac arrest, in which the heart stops circulating blood.
"It's definitely been shown in all different ways that when
you put a whole population under a stressor that sudden death
will increase," said Dr. Rachel Lampert of Yale University
in New Haven, Connecticut, whose study appears in the Journal
of the American College of Cardiology.
"Our study starts to look at how does this really affect
the electrical system of the heart," Lampert said.
She and colleagues studied 62 patients with heart disease and
implantable heart defibrillators or ICDs that can detect dangerous
heart rhythms or arrhythmias and deliver an electrical shock to
restore a normal heart beat.
"These were people we know already had some vulnerability
to arrhythmia,"
Patients in the study took part in an exercise in which they recounted
a recent angry episode while Lampert's team did a test called
T-Wave Alternans that measures electrical instability in the heart.
Lampert said the team specifically asked questions to get people
to relive the angry episode. "We found in the lab setting
that yes, anger did increase this electrical instability in these
patients," she said.
Next, they followed patients for three years to see which patients
later had a cardiac arrest and needed a shock from their implantable
defibrillator.
"The people who had the highest anger-induced electrical
instability were 10 times more likely than everyone else to have
an arrhythmia in follow-up," she said.
Lampert said the study suggests that anger can be deadly, at least
for people who are already vulnerable to this type of electrical
disturbance in the heart.
"It says yes, anger really does impact the heart's electrical
system in very specific ways that can lead to sudden death,"
she said.
But she cautioned against extrapolating the results to people
with normal hearts. "How anger and stress may impact people
whose hearts are normal is likely very different from how it may
impact the heart which has structural abnormalities," she
said.
Lampert is now conducting a study to see if anger management classes
can help decrease the risk of arrhythmia in this group of at-risk
patients.
Sudden cardiac death accounts for more than 400,000 deaths each
year in the United States, according to the American College of
Cardiology.
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