STRESS AND HEART DISEASE
Researchers
have shown that anger, anxiety, and depression not only affect the functioning
of the heart, but also increase heart disease risk.
Stroke and
heart attacks are the end products of progressive damage to blood vessels
supplying the heart and brain, a process called atherosclerosis.
Atherosclerosis
progresses when there are high levels of chemicals in the body called
pro-inflammatory cytokines.
It is
thought that persisting stress increases the risk for atherosclerosis and
cardiovascular disease by evoking negative emotions that, in turn, raise the
levels of pro-inflammatory chemicals in the body.
Researchers
have now investigated the underlying neural circuitry of this process, and
report their findings in the current issue of Biological Psychiatry.
To conduct the study, Dr. Peter Gianaros, Associate Professor at
the University of Pittsburgh and first author on the study and his colleagues
recruited 157 healthy adult volunteers who were asked to regulate their
emotional reactions to unpleasant pictures while their brain activity was
measured with functional imaging.
The
researchers also scanned their arteries for signs of atherosclerosis to assess
heart disease risk and measured levels of inflammation in the bloodstream, a
major physiological risk factor for atherosclerosis and premature death by
heart disease.
They found
that individuals who show greater brain activation when regulating their
negative emotions also exhibit elevated blood levels of interleukin-6, one of
the body’s pro-inflammatory cytokines, and increased thickness of the carotid
artery wall, a marker of atherosclerosis.
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