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JANUARY / FEBRUARY
2005
AROUND HARVARD
This article originally appeared in
the December 2004 Harvard Men’s Health Watch and is provided courtesy
of Harvard
Health Publications.
Timing is everything: Fluctuations in cardiac risk
Many human activities are governed by the calendar and
the clock, and an expanding body of evidence suggests that human disease
also varies with time and date. It’s easy to see why heat stroke occurs
in summer, frostbite in winter, and it’s natural that influenza and
pneumonia peak in winter, when folks are crowded together, coughing on one
another. But what about heart attacks? Spring may make the heart beat fonder,
but heart attacks don’t follow the seasons, much less the clock — or
do they?
Seasonal variations
T. S. Eliot believed, “April is the cruelest month.” Even with
your tax bill coming due, however, it’s not the hardest month for your
heart. For cardiac cruelty, try January. Heart attacks peak during the winter
months, and data from the Second National Registry of Myocardial Infarction
(heart attacks) make it clear. When researchers analyzed 259,891 heart attacks
reported over a two-year span by 1,474 hospitals throughout the United States,
they found a marked seasonal variation. Winter was the top heart attack season,
followed by fall, then spring, then summer. All in all, there were 53% more
heart attacks in winter (December 21–March 19) than summer (June 21–September
22). January was the leader, with twice as many heart attacks per day than
July, the safest month. And in addition to being more common in the winter,
heart attacks were also more serious, with a 9% fatality rate. Another study
found that winter heart attacks produce more damage to cardiac muscle than
those in any other season.
This nationwide American study is an impressive demonstration of the seasonal
variation in heart attack risk, but it does not stand alone. Studies from Australia
to Ireland and England to Romania and Bulgaria have yielded similar findings.
The seasonal flux is generally greatest in temperate zones, but it also occurs
in places that are warm year-round. In Hawaii, the heart attack death rate
is 22% higher in winter than summer. In Los Angeles it is 30% higher, with
the rise beginning around Thanksgiving and peaking around New Year’s
Day.
Heart attacks are not the only cardiac problems that peak in winter. A six-year
study from Scotland found that hospital admissions for congestive heart
failure were 15%–18% higher in winter than during the rest of the
year. Similarly, serious, potentially fatal disorders of the heart’s
pumping rhythm are more common in winter than in any other season.
What accounts for the trend? Doctors don’t know for sure, but several
factors are likely to contribute.
Low temperature. Cold is a vasoconstrictor.
To conserve internal heat in a cold environment, the body narrows the
blood vessels in the skin and limbs. It’s why your hands and
feet are pale and icy during exposure to cold and why they are vulnerable
to frostbite. But narrowed blood vessels also mean higher blood pressure
readings, and hypertension puts a stress on the heart. Indeed, blood
pressure readings tend to rise in winter. Still, the cold can’t
explain everything, since January is the peak heart attack month in
Honolulu as well as New York.
Lack of exercise. Habitual exercise protects the heart.
In cold climates, people tend to slack off in winter. But cardiac protection
shouldn’t vanish all at once, and in warm climates people may
even get more exercise during winter months.
Snow shoveling. Even if a decline in regular exercise
doesn’t play a major role, a seasonal burst of increased exercise
does, at least in regions where Old Man Winter does his thing.
Holiday happenings. Whether or not there is snow on
the ground, people usually celebrate the holidays with family feasts
and numerous parties. Weight gain is common, but it’s usually
not enough to tip a man into the hazardous realm of obesity. Alcohol
is a double-edged sword; over the long run, low doses can reduce cardiac
risk, but binge drinking can produce problems like high blood pressure
and abnormal heart rhythms. High-fat dining may also be a factor. By
interfering with arterial relaxation and by activating the clotting
system, even a single high-fat meal can spell trouble for men with
coronary artery disease. Sexual activity tends to peak around Christmas
and New Year’s, but conventional sex with a familiar partner
should be safe for all but the most fragile hearts.
Respiratory infections. Winter is the time when people
stay in and bugs come out. A study of nearly 10,000 patients in Great
Britain found that acute respiratory infections are associated with
an increased risk of heart attacks. Simple colds won’t stress
the heart, but influenza and pneumonia can, especially if they cause
high fevers and low oxygen levels. It’s why immunizations for
influenza and pneumonia are so important (see Flu shots, heart
attacks, and health, box below).
Biological factors. A 2004 study reported that cholesterol
levels peak in December for men and in January for women. New cardiac
risk factors such as fibrinogen, C-reactive protein, and apolipoprotein
B also rise in winter.
Stress and depression. The holiday season can be stressful
for people with many commitments and depressing for those who are alone.
The short daylight hours can also trigger seasonal affective disorder and
depression. At any time of the year, stress and depression can be heartbreaking,
and they certainly may compound winter’s woes.
Smoking. Cigarette sales peak around the holidays.
Even secondhand smoke can trigger cardiac problems. It’s both
depressing and stressful.
Daily variations
If the seasonal fluctuation in cardiac risk is a wake-up call this winter,
the daily variation will be an eye-opener tomorrow morning.
For heart attacks, morning is prime time. A meta-analysis of 30 studies that
included 66,635 patients found a 40% increase in risk between 6 a.m. and noon.
Similarly, sudden cardiac deaths are 29% more common in the early morning than
at other times of the day. Serious arrhythmias and deaths from congestive heart
failure follow the same pattern. A 2004 study provided a pathological explanation
for this pattern when it reported that ruptures of coronary artery plaques
peak between 6 a.m. and noon.
The body has an internal clock that may help explain the striking distribution
of cardiac risk. For one thing, hormone levels fluctuate in a very predictable
pattern over a 24-hour cycle. The stress hormones adrenaline and cortisol peak
in the early morning, as does the male hormone testosterone; in contrast,
the “dark hormone” melatonin is produced mostly at night. Body
temperature follows a similar rhythm; in most people, it’s about 97¾
at 5 a.m. and gradually rises to an average of 99.4¾ at 5 p.m. before falling
again overnight. Blood pressure follows an opposite cycle, being highest in
the morning and lowest during sleep. Finally, a 2004 study found that endothelial
function is impaired in the early morning, so that blood vessels cannot
widen normally when tissues need more blood.
Stress is the other major factor. The simple act of waking up seems to be stressful.
Adrenaline jolts through the bloodstream. Blood pressure jumps. And platelets,
the tiny blood cells that trigger the blood clots that can block cholesterol-laden
arteries, become stickier and more likely to start the clotting process. All
in all, it’s no wonder that heart attacks are particularly common within
three hours of arising.
The morning peak in heart attacks raises an alarming possibility. For many
men, morning is the most convenient time to exercise; does the stress of exercise
add to the stress of waking, further boosting cardiac risk? Fortunately, the
answer appears to be no. A study of cardiac rehabilitation programs in North
Carolina found the same low rate of complications whether the program started
at 7:30 a.m. or 3 p.m. All the patients followed a careful warm-up and cool-down
routine, and so should you. Always stretch and warm up before you exercise,
particularly if you plan to work out in dawn’s early light.
Weekly variations
The seasons of the year and the hours of the day depend on the laws of nature,
based on the earth’s orbit around the sun and its rotation on its own
axis. The days of the week, on the other hand, derive from the laws of man — and
the five-day work week is the reason heart attacks peak on Monday. Serious
arrhythmias follow the same pattern. Although the details vary, the Monday
miseries have been reported in both men and women and in people who work as
well as those who have retired. All in all, cardiac events are about 20% more
frequent on Mondays than on the other days of the week. Saturdays and Sundays
are the safest except for Frenchmen, who appear to be at higher risk during
weekends; it’s one more example of the “French paradox.”
Stress is the likely explanation for the Monday peak in cardiac risk. Retirees
may retain the responses they learned in their working years, and they are
certainly susceptible to the hustle and bustle of a Monday morning.
Shakespeare’s Romans were cautioned to beware the Ides of March. If he
were writing today, the Bard might well advise us to beware of Mondays in January.
Other diseases
Because they are vascular diseases, strokes and heart attacks have much in
common. Like heart attacks, strokes are most common (and most serious) in the
morning; more than 45% of all strokes occur between 6 a.m. and noon. Like heart
attacks, strokes peak on Mondays. However, the seasonal distribution of strokes
is less clear. Studies from Australia and Wisconsin fingered winter as the
season of risk, but researchers in North Carolina implicated spring.
Three other diseases that are particularly prevalent in men tend to vary with
the clock. Gout is likely to strike in the dark of night. The pain of kidney
stones tends to begin in the wee hours of the morning, probably because urine
production slows at night, at least in younger and middle-aged men. Finally,
the cataclysm of a ruptured aortic aneurysm is most likely between 6 a.m. and
noon, following the pattern of other vascular events.
Time out?
Time marches on. Even if you don’t set an alarm, your biological clock
increases your cardiovascular vulnerability when you awaken in the morning.
Even after you retire, you’re likely to retain some of Monday’s
risk. And although you may enjoy a winter in Florida, you can’t entirely
escape winter’s toll on the heart.
But if you can’t stop time, you can lighten its load. Stretch and warm
up in the morning, especially before you exercise. Try to reduce your stress
at work, and learn to pace yourself all week long. Avoid binge drinking and
heavy, high-fat meals, particularly around the holidays. Keep warm in the winter
and shovel snow with extreme care, if at all. Get your flu shot each year and
a pneumonia vaccination every 5–10 years. Avoid tobacco in all its forms,
including secondhand smoke. And listen to your body with extra attention at
times of extra risk — it’s the timely thing to do.
Flu shots, heart attacks, and health
Flu shots are designed to protect
you from influenza and the pneumonia that often follows in its
wake — but can they protect your heart as well?
Perhaps. Doctors in Texas evaluated 218 patients with stable coronary artery
disease; half had received flu shots, but the others had not. In the six
months from October to March, the flu shot recipients enjoyed a 67% lower
risk of heart attacks, even though the groups were closely matched for
age, cardiac risk factors, and medications. And a 2002 French study of
270 individuals reported that flu shots were associated with a 50% reduction
in the risk of stroke. Even more impressive is a 2003 study of more than
286,000 Americans older than 65; flu shots were associated with a 19% reduction
in the risk of hospitalization for heart disease and a similar reduction
in hospitalization for stroke.
The studies are interesting, but more research is needed before doctors
can recommend flu shots to reduce your risk of heart attack and stroke.
But nearly everyone over 50 should get a flu shot to help prevent influenza
and pneumonia, which cause 35,000 extra deaths in the U.S. each winter.
Since influenza shots contain a tiny amount of egg protein, people who
are highly allergic to eggs are exceptions to the rule. Flu shots are particularly
important for people with heart disease, lung disease, diabetes, kidney
disease, and other chronic illnesses. Immunization is also strongly recommended
for health care providers. And people with chronic illnesses and those
over 65 should also receive an immunization against pneumococcal pneumonia
every 5–10 years.
Doctors can prescribe antibiotics to treat pneumonia, but as the bugs become
more resistant, the choice of drugs is getting trickier. Antibiotics are
useless for influenza, but special antiviral drugs can help if they are
prescribed in the first day or two. As always, though, prevention is the
best medicine. |
Copyright 2006 Harvard Medical International
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