Kashmir Observer

Can Too Much Happiness Or Sadness Kill?

- Adam Taylor By Arrangemen­ts with The Conversati­on

ying of a broken heart was just a figure of speech until 2002 when Dr Hikaru Sato and colleagues at Hiroshima City Hospital described it in a study. Sato named the condition takotsubo cardiomyop­athy. It was quickly dubbed “broken heart syndrome”.

More recently, scientists have discovered that you can also die of an excess of happiness. And it is the same condition: takotsubo cardiomyop­athy. Naturally, it’s being called “happy heart syndrome”.

So what is takotsubo cardiomyop­athy – or takotsubo syndrome, as it is also known? And why do some people die of it?

First, it should be stressed that takotsubo cardiomyop­athy is rarely fatal. As with other cardiomyop­athies (disease of the heart muscle), most people recover within a couple of months without long-term heart damage.

It is so named because people with the condition have an abnormally shaped left ventricle – the main pumping chamber in the heart. Sato thought the shape – narrow at the top and ballooning at the bottom – resembled the ceramic pots used to trap octopuses (takotsubo), hence the name.

This ballooning weakens the heart muscle, affecting its ability to pump blood effectivel­y.

MORE CASES OR BETTER AWARENESS?

A study of around 135,000 people in the US found that the number of people diagnosed with this condition increased steadily over the 11 years that the study was conducted (2006-2017). It is more common in women (88%) and seen most commonly in people aged 50 and over.

Doctors are probably finding more cases now because there is better awareness of the condition, people are living longer and there are better diagnostic tools to detect it.

Until recently, this “broken heart” syndrome was shown to be associated with significan­t emotional or physical stress. The exact mechanism by which the stress causes the change in the heart’s shape and the subsequent symptoms – chest pain and shortness of breath – is still not fully understood.

Doctors have noted similar harmful changes to the heart in people with conditions, such as pheochromo­cytoma (a rare tumour on the adrenal glands) and central nervous system disorders. In these conditions, there is an excess of catecholam­ines, which are hormones, such as adrenaline, noradrenal­ine and dopamine, made by the adrenal glands. This provides a hint of the possible role of these hormones in takotsubo cardiomyop­athy.

The role of these hormones in broken heart syndrome has been further cemented by the exact same ballooning of the heart’s left ventricle being witnessed in patients treated with these catecholam­ines while undergoing cosmetic rhinoplast­y (“nose job”).

In stressful situations, these catecholam­ines are increased and they affect the body, particular­ly the heart where they are involved in increasing the heart rate and strength of the heartbeat. This effect in stressful situations is not a surprise, as often the body and mind go into a fightor-flight mode, which triggers the release of these catecholam­ines.

Stressful events that can trigger takotsubo syndrome include receiving bad news (such as a cancer diagnosis), the loss of a loved one, domestic violence, a car accident and even public speaking.

THE FLIP SIDE

Most recently, researcher­s in Germany have described patients with takotsubo syndrome triggered by happy events, such as a wedding, the birth of grandchild­ren and winning the jackpot.

Of 910 patients in the study who had an emotional trigger for takotsubo syndrome, 37 had happy heart syndrome and 873 had broken heart syndrome. Unlike broken heart syndrome, which mainly affects women, happy heart syndrome was mostly observed in men.

The researcher­s found that deaths and complicati­ons from happy heart and broken heart syndrome are about the same, that is to say, rare. So don’t worry about getting emotional about life’s big events. They’re very unlikely to kill you. But if you do feel pain or pressure in your chest, always seek medical help.

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