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Love
is Good For Your Heart
Two
studies suggest that intimate relationships, even ones that aren't
so great, lower blood pressure. While people in poor relationships
tended to avoid each other, when they were together blood pressures
still dropped.
When
you are with the one you love the lightness you feel in your heart
may just be your blood pressure dropping.
A new study
reports that when people were with their spouses or partners their
blood pressure lowered slightly. It didn't matter if the relationship
was a loving or positive one, either. Even if the relationship
was not a particularly happy one, blood pressure still dropped
a bit.
"The lowering
was not a big difference, but it's significant," said lead author
of a study, assistant professor of psychology Brooks Gump, of
the State University of New York at Oswego.
Familiarity
Breeds Lower Systolic Numbers
For the most
part, participants' systolic blood pressure went down an average
one point, said Gump. The study looked at 120 participants who
wore blood pressure monitors over a six-day period.
The fact that
blood pressure lowered even with participants who weren't in happy
relationships suggests that part of the reason for the drop was
the fact that the relationship was familiar and that participants
were in predictable situations, Gump said.
"People in
poor relationships tended to avoid their spouses more, but overall
their blood pressure still went down when they were together,"
Gump said.
Another report,
from the Washington, D.C.-based National Institute of Medicine,
took a look at the relationship between health and behavior and
found that intimate relationships tended to add years to one's
life. It recommends more studies to take a look at overall behavior
and its effect on health.
"There is
an idea that relationships can become a protective device against
heart disease," said Gump. "There needs to be more of a look ."
Studies in
the United States, Scandinavia and Japan have consistently shown
that people who are isolated or disconnected from others are at
an increased risk of dying prematurely, the National Institute
of Medicine study said. The report looked at previous studies
and their findings and described interventions that could maintain
or improve health.
There is a
need for examining social relationships in early and later life
and the importance of deep, meaningful, loving human connections
and how intimate relationships or their lack affect health, the
study said.
Reference
Source 104
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