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Type A Types Leads to High Blood Pressure
Excerpt
By Serena Gordon,
HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews)
-- If you're the type who pounds a fist on the steering wheel
every time you get stuck in traffic, you may be traveling down
the fast lane to high blood pressure and heart disease.
A new study suggests that people
who are impatient and feel constantly pressed for time are more
likely to develop high blood pressure as they age.
The study, which was just presented
at the American Heart Association's scientific sessions meeting
in Chicago, dubs this feeling "time urgency/impatience"
-- or TUI.
"The higher the sense of time
urgency, the higher the risk of developing hypertension,"
says one of the study's authors, LiJing Yan, a research assistant
professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University in
Chicago.
One in four Americans has high
blood pressure, according to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute. Risk factors include being older, overweight, black
and having a family history of the disease.
Another risk factor may be having
a "Type A" personality. The hallmark traits include
TUI, competitiveness, hostility, tenseness and aggressiveness.
Yan says the results of studies that have tried to link Type A
types with high blood pressure and heart disease have been inconsistent,
which is what led the researchers to study just one aspect of
the Type A personality.
"Different components of Type
A may have different effects," she says.
Yan and her colleagues gathered
data from the CARDIA (Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young
Adults) study. They included information from more than 3,000
men and women, black and white, who were between the ages of 18
and 30 when the study began. The study participants came from
four different metropolitan areas -- Minneapolis, Birmingham,
Ala., Oakland, Calif., and Chicago.
Blood pressure measurements were
taken at the start of the study and in the second year. Anyone
with hypertension at that time was excluded from the study. Blood
pressure measurements were then taken again at year 15 for the
remaining volunteers.
The volunteers also completed questionnaires
at the start of the study and during the second year. They were
asked to rate how well statements such as "eating too quickly,"
"usually feeling pressed for time," or "often feeling
time pressures at the end of a work day," described their
personality. Six percent of the volunteers felt all of those statements
described them very well, placing them in the highest level of
TUI.
Overall, 14.3 percent of the group
developed high blood pressure by the 15th year, Yan says. In the
highest TUI group, however, 17 percent had developed high blood
pressure. In the lowest TUI group, only 10 percent had developed
high blood pressure. And when the researchers adjusted the data
to control for such factors as age, race, sex, body mass index
and alcohol intake, they found people with the highest TUI scores
were more than twice as likely to develop high blood pressure
than those with the lowest scores.
At the end of the study, black
men had the highest rate of high blood pressure, at 22 percent,
compared to 12 percent for white men. Black women also had higher
rates -- 21 percent -- compared to only 5 percent for white women.
In all of the groups, high blood pressure rates were significantly
greater in the highest TUI groups.
People with high levels of TUI
also had high rates of other poor health behaviors such as smoking,
drinking, high hostility and a lack of social support.
"People need to realize that
the risk factors for heart disease often travel together,"
says Dr. Dan Fisher, a cardiologist at New York University Medical
Center in New York City. "People running around like crazy
are more likely to be living less than an ideal lifestyle. They
may be smoking or not eating right or not getting enough exercise."
"Studies like this are important
because they raise awareness of the problem and hopefully we can
find treating this early helps lower hypertension," Fisher
adds. "An ounce of prevention really is worth a pound of
cure. Dealing with stress or TUI early in life may help reduce
the risk of coronary disease later in life."
What To Do
To learn more about blood pressure
and how to prevent high blood pressure, visit the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute or the University
of Michigan Health System.
Here are some tips from the American
Medical Association on controlling
stress.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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