The Jerusalem Post

Israeli study: Active sex life tied to long-term survival after a heart attack

- • By LISA RAPAPORT

Heart attack survivors who have an active sex life are less likely than their celibate counterpar­ts to die in the decades following a first heart attack, a study in Israel suggests.

Researcher­s followed the fates of 1,120 men and women, who were 65 years old or younger at the time of their first heart attack, for up to 22 years. During the study period, 524 people died.

Compared to people who reported not having sex at all during the year before their heart attack, those who had intercours­e more than once a week were 27% less likely to die during the study period, while those who had sex weekly were 12% less likely to die. People who had some sex – but not often – were 8% less likely to die.

The connection between sex and survival odds appeared even stronger for people with active sex lives after they had a heart attack, but with smaller difference­s between the people who were sexually active. Compared to survivors who never had sex, those who had sex less than once a week during the follow-up period were 28% less likely to die, while people who had sex weekly were 37% less likely to die and those who had sex more than once a week were 33% less likely to die.

“Not surprising­ly, the people who were sexually active were more likely to be in a relationsh­ip, were younger, and [were] generally healthier,” said Andrew Steptoe, head of the department of Behavioura­l Science and Health at University College London in the UK.

People who had sex more than once a week in the year before their heart attack were 49 years old on average at the start of the study, compared to an average age of 58 for people who had no sex at all the year before their heart attack.

Sexually inactive people were also more likely to have high blood pressure, high cholestero­l, diabetes and multiple chronic health problems in the year before the heart attack than people who had sex more than once a week.

Less than half of sexually inactive people lived with a steady partner in the year before their heart attack, compared with 94% of people who had sex more than once a week.

In the year prior to the heart attack, 67% of the people who didn’t have sex also didn’t exercise at all, compared with 45% of people who had sex more than weekly.

When researcher­s adjusted for age, lifestyle, other health conditions and socioecono­mic factors, the link between being sexually active and survival weakened, Yariv Gerber of Tel Aviv University and colleagues write in the American Journal of Medicine. Gerber didn’t respond to requests for comment.

It’s possible that frequent sex leads to biological changes that help people live longer, Gerber’s team writes. Sex is associated with longer caps on the end of chromosome­s, known as telomeres, that tend to shrink with age and in response to stress, the study team writes. Longer telomeres are associated with longer life.

Regular sex is also linked to higher levels of the hormone testostero­ne in men and women, they said. Low testostero­ne is associated with both an increased risk of cardiovasc­ular disease and low sexual desire – so people who have more sex may also have a lower risk of heart problems.

It’s also possible that being sexually active is a sign of better health rather than a cause of it. The study wasn’t designed to determine whether or how sex might help heart attack survivors live longer.

“Sexual activity is often part of a close and loving relationsh­ip as people age, but the relationsh­ip is probably more important than the sex,” Steptoe, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. “Although regular sex is part of healthy aging, people should not feel that they ‘ought’ to have sex in order to try to live longer.” (Reuters)

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