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Physical, emotional stress trigger
heart attack
New York -
A sudden surge of physical activity or bout of extreme emotional
distress can precipitate a heart attack in people at risk, according
to a recent review of medical literature.
Investigators from the University
College London, UK, found consistent evidence from previous studies
that when normally inactive people engage in a burst of physical
activity, or when people are emotionally stressed, angry or excited,
they are more likely to experience a heart attack.
However, despite the potential danger
associated with bursts of physical activity, the benefits of exercise
very much outweigh its risks, study author Dr. Andrew Steptoe told
Reuters Health.
"It is extremely unlikely that a
person will experience a heart attack on any single session of
exercise," he said. "Considering that physical fitness and regular
exercise are protective for heart disease, my advice would certainly
be to carry on exercising."
Steptoe explained that most heart
attacks occur when a piece of plaque breaks away from the inside of
blood vessels, blocking blood flow to the heart. Vigorous exercise may
precipitate this by increasing the chances plaque will become
dislodged, he said, or by disrupting the normal heart rhythm.
Emotional stress may have the same
effect on the body, and may also put the heart at risk by increasing
blood pressure and releasing stress hormones, Steptoe noted.
To investigate how stress can
influence the heart, Steptoe and his co-author, Philip C. Strike,
reviewed studies conducted between 1970 and 2004 that examined what
people were doing and feeling in the hours before their heart attacks.
Overall, studies found that emotional
stress and extreme physical activity were two of the most common
triggers reported by heart attack patients.
In one study of 224 patients, more
than half said they had been very upset or stressed in the 24 hours
preceding their attack.
In another study, the most common
triggers reported by 1818 heart attack patients included heavy
physical work, quarrels at work or home, and mental stress.
Other studies showed that the risk of
heart attack appeared to increase within hours of an earthquake,
exciting sports match or high-pressure deadlines at work. Still other
research in 1623 heart attack patients found that attacks occurred
more often within 2 hours after an angry outburst.
The risk of having a heart attack in
response to stress appeared to be influenced by how healthy people
were to begin with, Steptoe and Strike note in the journal
Psychosomatic Medicine.
For instance, one study showed that
people who rarely exercised were nearly seven times more likely to
have a heart attack after vigorous activity than people who exercised
regularly.
Based on these findings, Steptoe
recommended that people who are concerned about heart attack avoid
vigorous exercise in very cold weather, which can place further stress
on the heart. People not used to exercise should start gradually, he
said, so as not to shock the system.
Although it's impossible to avoid all
emotional stress, "we can learn to control inappropriate emotional
displays and keep negative feelings in check," Steptoe added. --
Reuters
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