|
Anxiety Increases Risk Of Heart Attack
Worried sick: We've all heard the phrase, but now there's
new evidence that might really knit your brow. New research shows
that highly anxious patients with heart disease face nearly double
the risk of heart attack or death when compared to those with
a more serene outlook on life.
Patients whose anxiety intensified over time were in greatest
peril, while those who started out highly anxious but later found
inner calm markedly reduced their risk. The research appears in
the May 22, 2007 issue of the Journal of the American College
of Cardiology (JACC).
"Most patients come in very anxious about their coronary condition,"
said Charles M. Blatt, M.D., F.A.C.C., director of research at
the Lown Cardiovascular Research Foundation and a clinical professor
of medicine at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston. "I'm
convinced that spending time with the patient and the family and
interacting with them as a caring human being is critically important
to clinical outcomes."
Previous studies have shown that mental stress and depression
have harmful effects on the heart and blood vessels, but until
now there has been little information on the corrosive effects
of anxiety or the benefits of relieving anxiety over time.
For the study, Dr. Blatt and his colleagues recruited 516 patients
with proven coronary artery disease. At the beginning of the study
and again each year patients completed a standardized questionnaire
about their feelings during the previous week, for example, whether
they felt peaceful, felt something bad would happen, took a long
time to fall asleep at night, or had upset bowels or stomach.
Patients were followed-up for an average of more than 3 years.
During that time, 19 patients died and 44 had a nonfatal heart
attack. Cumulative anxiety scores were averaged and adjusted for
age, and the patients divided into 3 groups. Those with anxiety
scores in the highest third had nearly double the risk of heart
attack or death when compared to those with anxiety scores in
the lowest third (hazard ratio, 1.97; p=0.04). Looked at from
another angle, the data showed a 6 percent increase in the risk
of death or heart attack each time the average cumulative anxiety
scored notched up by 1 unit (p=0.02).
The initial anxiety score alone offered little clue to the patient's
future health. However, an increase in anxiety over time hiked
the risk of heart attack or death by 10 percent (p<0.001).
Conversely, patients whose anxiety level was in the highest third
at baseline, but in the lowest third when cumulative average anxiety
levels were tallied, were among the least likely to have a heart
attack or to die.
This finding shows not only the need for repeated measurements
to accurately gauge the impact of anxiety but also suggests an
important role for physicians in reassuring anxious patients,
Dr. Blatt said. Spending extra time with patients and families
gives the cardiologist an opportunity to talk about heart disease,
adjust medications, encourage exercise, and come up with effective
strategies to improve cardiac risk factors, such as smoking, high
cholesterol and high blood pressure. Equally important, it helps
to establish a caring relationship that allays the fears that
could shorten a patient's life.
"I tell patients well-managed coronary disease is consistent
with a long happy life. If you give people this type of reassurance,
it turns a frightening disease into something they can grow old
with," Dr. Blatt said.
James L. Januzzi, M.D., F.A.C.C., agreed. "This study provides
further insight into the complex connections between the brain
and heart," said Dr. Januzzi, an associate professor of medicine
at Harvard Medical School and director of the cardiac intensive
care unit at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. "Appropriately,
cardiologists have traditionally focused their therapeutic efforts
on factors known to influence long-term outcome in coronary disease,
such as making sure to aggressively lower LDL cholesterol. The
results of this study demonstrate that we may need to consider
more thoroughly evaluating patients with mood disorders such as
anxiety, as treatment may very well reduce the risk of heart disease."
Now that research has documented the detrimental effects of anxiety,
the next step is to determine the most effective ways of both
relieving anxiety and improving cardiac health. Anti-anxiety medications
and psychotherapy will be evaluated in the next phase of the study,
but Dr. Blatt and his colleagues will also be taking a close look
at the doctor-patient relationship. "My hunch is that for the
majority of patients, the greatest anxiety-reducing effect comes
from having a good relationship with a doctor," Dr Blatt said.
Collaborating in the study were Yinong Young-Xu, Sc.D., M.S.,
M.A., senior epidemiologist at the Lown Cardiovascular Research
Foundation, and Woldecherkos A. Shibeshi, M.D., a clinical and
research fellow at Lown Cardiovascular Research Foundation at
the time of the study and now a resident in internal medicine
at Howard University Hospital, Washington, DC.
Dr. Blatt does not report any potential conflicts of interest
regarding this topic.
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|