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Anger hurts younger hearts
Chicago -
High levels of anger may help drive coronary artery disease in many
patients under 50 years of age, researchers say.
They add that they believe reductions
in hostility levels would probably help ease symptoms.
The study of 500 coronary artery
disease patients found that those younger than 50 had hostility scores
two and a half times higher, on average, than patients aged 65 and
older.
"We believe that reducing hostility
and other parameters of psychological distress, particularly in young
coronary artery disease patients, should be emphasized, as well as the
potential benefits of cardiac rehabilitation for the secondary
prevention of coronary artery disease," study author and cardiologist
Dr. Carl Lavie, of the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans, said
in a prepared statement.
Recent research indicates that
younger coronary artery disease patients have an especially poor
long-term prognosis. There's also evidence that hostility is
associated with the early development of coronary artery disease, as
well as a rise in risk for heart attack.
Following cardiac rehabilitation,
younger patients with hostility symptoms showed improvements in
coronary artery disease risk factors, behavior characteristics and
quality of life -- as well as a nearly 50 percent reduction in
hostility symptoms, the study said. -- Health Day News
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