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Anger Tears Your Heart Apart
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Don't be hostile to your heart.
High hostility levels may predict
heart disease more often than other more commonly recognized risk
factors such as cigarette smoking, weight and high cholesterol,
says a study in the November issue of Health Psychology.
The American study, which included
774 white men whose average age was 60, examined whether hostility
was an independent or contributing factor in the development of
CHD.
For three years, researchers assessed
the men's hostility levels, blood lipids, fasting insulin, blood
pressure, body measurement index, weight-hip ratio, diet, alcohol
consumption, smoking and education achievement.
The study found CHD was more common
in men with high hostility levels than in men with risk factors
such as smoking, high cholesterol and drinking.
Specifically, 5.8 per cent (45)
of the men with high hostility levels had at least one episode
of CHD.
In a prepared statement, the authors
say the study shows that hostility is associated with and predicts
CHD above and beyond other traditional risk factors.
They suggest hostility may predispose
people to CHD through other mechanisms such as cardiac arrhythmia,
nervous system imbalances and endocrine-neuroendocrine responses
to stress.
More information
Here's where to go to learn more
about cardiovascular
health.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
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