A study of people with cardiac troubles suggests that bursts of anger precede the most dangerous flutters of the heart.
To explore how feelings affect heartbeats, Matthew Stopper of the Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, and his colleagues asked 24 patients with implanted defibrillator devices to keep a diary of their emotions.
The patients all had conditions that can disrupt electrical signals to the heart, causing an unhealthy quivering of the muscles. This in turn can lead to a cardiac arrest. Their implanted defibrillators are designed to detect these abnormalities and deliver a life-saving electric shock to put their hearts back in the right rhythm.
After receiving such a shock, participants in the study rated how angry they had felt beforehand on a scale of 1 to 5.
The medical team then retrieved information from the defibrillator devices to see how their hearts had gone wrong.
Out of the 56 shocks recorded during the study, the researchers found that in 100% of cases where people reported anger levels above 2, the arrhythmias were initiated by a series of rapid, premature heart contractions. This type of contraction is known to put an individual at greater risk of sudden arrest.
In contrast, only 68% of arrhythmias not preceded by angry feeling had this characteristic. Stopper and his fellow scientists presented their results on 5 May, at the Heart Rhythm Society's annual meeting in New Orleans, Louisiana.
"We know that the emotional distress brought on by earthquakes, missile attacks and even the loss of key football matches can trigger heart attacks," says health psychologist Doug Carroll of the University of Birmingham, UK. "It had been presumed that this results from an increased likelihood of clot formation. But this study tells us that strong emotions such as anger can also disrupt the electrical rhythms of the heart."
Courtesy of Nature 5/6/2005
Friday, May 06, 2005
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