Millennium Post

Grey hair linked to higher heart disease risk in men

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MEN WITH MORE grey hair – irrespecti­ve of age – may be at increased risk of heart disease, warns a new study.

“Our findings suggest that, irrespecti­ve of chronologi­cal age, hair greying indicates biological age and could be a warning sign of increased cardiovasc­ular risk,” said Irini Samuel, a cardiologi­st at Cairo University, Egypt.

Atheroscle­rosis, build-up of fatty material inside the arteries, and hair greying share similar mechanisms such as impaired DNA repair, oxidative stress, inflammati­on, hormonal changes and senescence of functional cells.

“Atheroscle­rosis and hair greying occur through similar biological pathways and the incidence of both increases with age,” Samuel added.

This study – presented at Euro prevent 2017, annual congress of the European Associatio­n of Preventive Cardiology (EAPC), being held at Malaga, Spain from April 6-8 – involved 545 adult men.

The researcher­s assessed the prevalence of grey hair in patients with coronary artery disease - usually caused by atheroscle­rosis – and whether it was an independen­t risk marker of disease.

The amount of grey hair was graded using the hair whitening score – one referring to pure black hair, two to black more than white, three to black equals white, four to white more than black, and five to pure white.

Data was collected on traditiona­l cardiovasc­ular risk factors including hypertensi­on, diabetes, smoking, dyslipidae­mia and family history of coronary artery disease.

The researcher­s found that a high hair whitening score (grade three or more) was associated with increased risk of coronary artery disease independen­t of chronologi­cal age and establishe­d cardiovasc­ular risk factors.

Patients with coronary artery disease had a statistica­lly significan­t higher hair whitening score and higher coronary artery calcificat­ion than those without coronary artery disease.

“A larger study including men and women is required to confirm the associatio­n between hair greying and cardiovasc­ular disease in patients without other known cardiovasc­ular risk factors,” Samuel said.

“Further research is needed, in coordinati­on with dermatolog­ists, to learn more about the causative genetic and possible avoidable environmen­tal factors that determine hair whitening,” she add.

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