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Type A Behavior May
Lead to Early Heart Attack
Excerpt
By Ed Edelson. Brown, HealthDayNews
Aggressive, impatient Type A behavior
doesn't seem to increase a man's overall risk of a heart attack,
but it does appear to make the attacks happen earlier, a Welsh
study finds.
Men who tested positive for Type
A behavior on psychological tests had about the same risk of suffering
a heart attack as their more placid counterparts, but they tended
to have those attacks sooner, says a report in the July issue
of Psychosomatic Medicine.
The trial was designed as yet another
effort to look at the influence of behavior on cardiovascular
risk, says study leader John E.J. Gallacher, a senior lecturer
in epidemiology at the University of Wales College of Medicine.
After nine years, the incidence
of heart attacks -- 12 percent -- was the same for the 538 men
who tested positive for Type A behavior and those who didn't,
Gallacher says. But the incidence of heart attacks dropped after
the fifth year, he says. A complex statistical analysis showed
that the lower incidence occurred primarily in the non-Type A
men, meaning that those with Type A had their attacks earlier.
"In this study, the association
of Type A with coronary heart disease is not whether, but when,"
Gallacher says.
The finding adds a twist to the
sometimes controversial relationship between Type A behavior and
heart disease, which was first described in 1958 by Dr. Meyer
Friedman of the University of San Francisco, working with Dr.
Ray Rosenman.
Several studies have found no increased
risk of heart attacks in Type A men, but three major studies conducted
by Friedman, one financed by the federal government, found a definite
link. Friedman attributed the negative results of the other trials
to a failure to test men's behavioral patterns properly.
Friedman died in 1990 at the age
of 90. He headed an institute at the University of San Francisco
that bears his name and carries on his work.
"We think we're tapping into
the time-urgent element rather than the hostility element of Type
A behavior," Gallacher says. That impatient behavior can
accelerate the effect of cardiovascular risk factors, he explains.
"If your arteries are reasonably
healthy, being time-urgent is irrelevant," Gallacher says.
"If your arteries are diseased, the more time-urgent you
are, the more likely you are to expose yourself to circumstances
that cause vascular failure."
That analysis fits in with Friedman's
feelings, says Wes Alles, a senior research scientist at Stanford
University who does work on Type A behavior.
"Friedman would say that inmates
at San Quentin didn't die of heart attacks," Alles says.
"Time was no longer important to them."
But there has been "some academic
debate about whether it is time-urgency or hostility that is to
blame," he says. "My feeling is that the two go together.
Frustration puts you in a struggle mood."
"You need to make time your
friend," Alles notes. "If not, you have a powerful enemy."
More information
You can about the Type A story
from its discoverer, Dr.
Meyer Friedman. Assess your own risk for heart disease with
a tool from the American
Heart Association.
Reference
Source 101
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