Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Link between Cardiac Deaths, Holidays is
focus of Podcast
Newswise — Research has found that heart
attacks peak during the winter months, and
the prevailing hypothesis has been that cold
temperatures stress the heart. But in 2004,
researchers analyzed 12 years of Los Angeles
County death certificates and found that
heart attack deaths also rise in the balmy
Los Angeles winters. What’s more, cardiac
deaths peak on Christmas and New Year’s Day
in L.A. County.
Could it be that the weather is not the most
important factor behind the seasonal
increase in heart attacks? Cardiologist
Robert Kloner discusses his research in
Episode 28 of the podcast, Life Lines. You
can find that episode at
http://lifelines.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=557789.
Dr. Kloner and his colleagues found that
cardiac deaths in Los Angeles County rose
33% during the months of November through
January and peaked on Christmas and New
Year's Day. Because the temperatures were
mild and stable during the three-month
period, they concluded that factors other
than temperature must play a role in the
increase in cardiac deaths.
Why would heart attack deaths spike during
the holidays? The researchers considered a
variety of possibilities, but concluded that
emotional stress associated with the
holidays is a primary factor.
How stress affects the cardiovascular system
Stress stimulates the sympathetic nervous
system, causing the release of
catecholamines, which increase heart rate,
blood pressure, and the force of the heart’s
contractions. This can intensify the
pressure of the blood against plaque in the
arteries and can cause the plaque to rupture
and possibly block blood flow.
Ruptured plaque may also release tissue
factors which stimulate formation of a blood
clot. The blood clot could shut off blood
flow in the coronary artery, contributing to
a heart attack.
In addition to increasing the possibility of
plaque rupture, the stimulation of the
sympathetic nervous system may trigger
arrhythmias, in which the heart beats
irregularly or rapidly.
Physiology is the study of how molecules,
cells, tissues and organs function to create
health or disease. The American
Physiological Society (APS) has been an
integral part of this scientific discovery
process since it was established in 1887.
... ..
...
...