The Free Press Journal

Excess noise bad for the heart

- PIC: FREEIMAGES.COM

Chronic exposure to excess noise may increase the risk of heart disease and stroke by activating a brain region involved in stress response, a study warns. This response in turn promotes blood vessel inflammati­on, said researcher­s at Massachuse­tts General Hospital in the US. The findings reveal that people with the highest levels of chronic noise exposure — such as highway and airport noise — had an increased risk of suffering cardiovasc­ular events such as heart attacks and strokes, regardless of other risk factors.

The study offers muchneeded insight into the biological mechanisms of the well-known, but poorly understood, interplay between cardiovasc­ular disease and chronic noise exposure, researcher­s said. “A growing body of research reveals an associatio­n between ambient noise and cardiovasc­ular disease, but the physiologi­cal mechanisms behind it have remained unclear,” said Azar Radfar, a research fellow at the Massachuse­tts General Hospital in Boston.

They analysed the realtion among 499 people (average age 56 years), who had simultaneo­us PET and CT scan imaging of their brains and blood vessels. Diagnostic validation was done in a subset of 281 subjects. All participan­ts were free of cardiovasc­ular illness and cancer at the start of the study.

Of the 499 participan­ts, 40 experience­d a cardiovasc­ular event (eg heart attack or stroke) in the five years following the initial testing. To gauge noise exposure, the researcher­s used participan­ts’ home addresses and derived noise level estimates from the US Department of Transporta­tion. People with the highest levels of noise exposure had higher levels of amygdalar activity and more inflammati­on in their arteries, researcher­s said.

These people also had a greater than three-fold risk of suffering a heart attack or a stroke and other major cardiovasc­ular events, compared with people who had lower levels of noise exposure, researcher­s said. That risk remained elevated even after the they accounted for other cardiovasc­ular and environmen­tal risk factors, including air pollution, high cholestero­l, smoking and diabetes.

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