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This article originally appeared in the
June 2005 Harvard Men’s Health Watch and is provided courtesy of Harvard
Health Publications.
Heart disease: It’s partly in your head
For worse or for better, how you think, feel, and live
your life affects your heart.
Intimate connections between the heart and mind were once taken for granted.
In some cultures, the heart was believed to be the seat and source of emotions.
As Western medicine gradually unraveled these connections, heart and mind
drifted apart. A new field, behavioral cardiology, is trying to stitch them
together again, this time with strong scientific threads.
This work is opening up new ways to prevent and treat heart disease that
will be good for the mind and the rest of the body.
Psychosocial factors
For better or for worse, your emotions and moods, and even parts of your
personality, can influence your heart. It isn’t a one-way street.
The health of your circulatory system can affect how you feel. Habits that
are good for the heart seem to be good for the mind and brain, too.
Cross
Talk Chemical “conversations” between
the heart and the head affect both. Depression, stress, loneliness,
a positive outlook, and
other psychosocial factors influence the heart. The health of the
heart can affect the brain and the mind.
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Psychological factors and social factors are sometimes
lumped together as psychosocial factors. They affect heart disease in two
basic ways.
Some contribute to atherosclerosis, the slow, corrosive process that
damages artery walls and puts you at risk for a heart attack or stroke.
Others
can
add the “final insult” that triggers a heart attack or stroke.
Psychosocial factors aren’t small potatoes. According to a comprehensive
international study reported in The Lancet in 2004, their contribution to
heart attacks is on a par with smoking, high blood pressure, obesity, and
cholesterol problems. This isn’t just in the stress-obsessed West,
but in the Middle East, China and Hong Kong, Latin America, and Africa, too.
Depression. Symptoms of depression, as well as full-blown major depression,
contribute to heart disease. People who become depressed after a heart attack
or stroke, heart surgery, or the onset of heart failure don’t fare
as well as those who aren’t depressed.
Anger/hostility. Atherosclerosis seems to advance faster in people who score
high on anger or hostility scales. Anger can also trigger heart attacks.
In the Harvard-based Determinants of Myocardial Infarction Onset Study, 1
in every 40 heart attack survivors reported an “episode of anger” in
the two hours before the attack.
Anxiety. Intense anxiety, the kind associated with fear of enclosed places,
heights, crowds, and the like, can sometimes set off a sudden cardiac arrest.
These often-fatal heart attacks happen when the heartbeat abruptly turns
fast and uncoordinated.
Social support. Among heart attack survivors, social isolation is almost
as important as high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and smoking at predicting
long-term survival.
Chronic stress. Constant stress from work, financial problems, a troubled
marriage, taking care of a parent or partner, or even living in an unsafe
neighborhood has been linked with the development of heart disease and doing
poorer with it.
Sudden emotional stress. Sudden emotional turmoil can set off a type of serious
but reversible heart failure dubbed broken heart syndrome. Researchers at
Johns Hopkins have documented its appearance in people after a death in the
family, a surprise party, a robbery, a car accident, and even fear of speaking
in public.
What’s the connection?
How do emotions, behaviors, or social situations promote heart disease or
make it worse? No one really knows. But there are plenty of theories.
Stress hormones top the list. They constrict blood vessels, speed up the
heartbeat, and make the heart and blood vessels especially reactive to further
stress. Psychosocial factors have also been linked with increases in C-reactive
protein, interleukin-1, and tumor necrosis factor. These signal increased
inflammation, which plays important roles in artery-clogging atherosclerosis.
Psychosocial factors could influence heart disease via a less physiologic
route, through habits that tip one toward heart disease or away from it.
Depression or isolation, for example, can keep people from taking the heart
medications they need, while a positive outlook or strong social network
can help people stop smoking or watch their weight.
What to do
Most psychosocial risk factors are neither bad nor good. A little dose of
stress, for example, can motivate you to face a challenge or finish a project.
Constant stress, though, can be harmful. The same can be said for anger,
anxiety, or isolation.“The point is not to eliminate particular negative
emotions, but to regulate them better, either to integrate them or bring
them into balance with positive emotions or behaviors,” says Dr. Laura
Kubzansky, an assistant professor at the Harvard School of Public Health
whose research focuses on the role of stress and emotion in cardiovascular
disease and aging.
Getting started isn’t easy. Admitting to yourself that you’re
chronically worried, stressed, sad, angry, or alone is hard. Telling someone
else, like your doctor, is even harder. But it’s an important first
step.
There’s no one-size-fits-all way to make changes. Some people can do
it on their own. Beginning (and sticking with) daily exercise can be a great
way to ease stress or beat depression. A do-it-yourself program like the
one described in Mind Your Heart, by Aggie Casey and Herbert Benson of the
Mind/Body Medical Institute in Chestnut Hill, Mass., offers help with stress
management, relaxation, and healthier habits. Just taking more vacation time
might help.
Many people, though, need the kind of help that comes with talk therapy or
formal, structured behavior modification programs.
The connection between psychosocial factors and heart disease is so strong
that today’s cardiologists should start the discussion by asking their
patients about moods, energy, stress, and support. Most don’t, at least
not yet.
If yours doesn’t, it’s worth bringing up these issues yourself.
Your doctor might extend the conversation, offer good suggestions, or gather
information you can use. Because cardiologists and primary care physicians
get little training in this area, though, don’t be surprised if yours
is uncomfortable talking about depression, anger, loneliness, or other psychosocial
factors, or doesn’t know how to help. If that’s the case, don’t
hesitate to ask for a referral to a mental health professional.
Dr. Kubzansky calls anger, depression, chronic stress, loneliness, and other
negative psychosocial factors “a signal that there is a problem, much
like that of chronic pain.” It’s time to treat them with the
same urgency and respect.
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