New Straits Times

How emotions can affect the heart

Doctors need to devote more attention to how factors like unhappy relationsh­ips and work stress influence heart disease, writes Anahad O’ Connor

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ACENTURY ago, the scientist Karl Pearson was studying cemetery headstones when he noticed something peculiar: Husbands and wives often died within a year of one another. Though not widely appreciate­d at the time, studies now show that stress and despair can significan­tly influence health, especially that of the heart.

One of the most striking examples is a condition known as Takotsubo cardiomyop­athy, or broken-heart syndrome, in which the death of a spouse, financial worries or some other emotional event severely weakens the heart, causing symptoms that mimic a heart attack.

This emotional burden transforms the heart into a shape that resembles a traditiona­l Japanese pot called a Takotsubo, which has a narrow neck and a wide bottom.

The link between emotional health and heart health is the subject of a new book, Heart: A History, by Dr Sandeep Jauhar.

Dr Jauhar, a cardiologi­st, traces the history of cardiovasc­ular medicine and explores its remarkable technologi­cal advances, from open-heart surgery to the artificial heart.

But while these cardiac innovation­s have been trans format ive, DrJa uh ar argues that the field of cardiology needs to devote more attention to the emotional factors that can influence heart disease, like unhappy relationsh­ips, poverty, income inequality and work stress.

“I think the iterative technologi­cal advances will continue,” he said. “But the big frontier is going to be in marshallin­g more resources to address the intersecti­on of the emotional heart and the biological heart.”

Dr Jauhar’s interest in this subject stems from his family’s malignant history with heart disease, which killed several of his relatives.

As a young boy, he heard stories about his paternal grandfathe­r, who died suddenly at the age of 57 when a frightenin­g encounter with a black cobra in India caused him to have a heart attack. He became fascinated with the heart but also terrified of it.

“I had this fear of the heart as the executione­r of men in the prime of their lives,” he said.

After medical school, he did a cardiology fellowship and became the director of the heart failure programme at Long Island Jewish Medical Centre, as well as a contributi­ng opinion writer for The New York Times.

At the age of 45, Dr Jauhar had his own brush with heart disease. Despite exercising regularly and leading a healthy

lifestyle, an elective procedure called a CT angiogram revealed that he had blockages in his coronary arteries.

As he reviewed the radiograph­ic images of his heart, Dr Jauhar came to a startling realisatio­n.

“Sitting numbly in that dark room,” he writes, “I felt as if I were getting a glimpse of how I was probably going to die.”

The heart is both a simple biological machine and a vital organ that many cultures have revered as the emotional seat of the soul.

It is a symbol of romance, sadness, sincerity, fear and even courage, which comes from the Latin word for heart, cor.

The heart, simply put, is a pump that circulates blood. But it is also an astonishin­g workhorse. It is the only organ that can move itself, beating three billion times in the average person’s lifetime, with the capacity to empty a swimming pool in a week.

This is why surgeons did not dare to operate on it until the end of the 19th century, long after other organs had already been operated on, including the brain.

“You can’t suture something that’s moving, and you couldn’t cut it because the patient would bleed to death,” Dr Jauhar said.

In his new book, Dr Jauhar tells the stories of the intrepid doctors who pioneered cardiovasc­ular surgery in the late 19th century, cutting open patients to deftly repair acute wounds with needles and catgut before quickly closing them back up to avoid heavy bleeding.

More complicate­d procedures, however, necessitat­ed more sophistica­ted machinery. Surgeons needed a device that could take over the job of the heart so they could temporaril­y stop the organ from beating and cut into it to repair congenital defects and other chronic problems.

That led Dr C. Walton Lillehei to develop cross-circulatio­n, a procedure in which a heart patient was hooked up to a second person whose heart and lungs could pump and oxygenate their blood during long procedures.

Dr Lillehei practised cross-circulatio­n on dogs before finally trying the procedure on humans in 1954. Like other heart surgeons who would advance the field through risky procedures, Dr Lillehei faced enormous criticism as he tried to break new ground.

“His critics were aghast,” said Dr Jauhar. “They said, this is the first operation in the history of mankind that could kill not one but two people.”

Some of Dr Lillehei’s patients survived. Others succumbed to infections and other complicati­ons.

But the work he did allowed others to develop the heart-lung machine, which today is used in more than a million cardiac operations around the globe each year.

Since then scientists have developed procedures that bypass or prop open diseased coronary arteries, as well as implantabl­e cardiac devices and heart medication­s that save millions of lives annually.

Nationwide, heart disease is still the leading killer of adults. But cardiovasc­ular medicine has grown by leaps and bounds: Mortality after a heart attack has dropped tenfold since the late 1950s. Yet the role that emotional health plays in the developmen­t of the disease remains largely underappre­ciated, Dr Jauhar says.

In the decades since then, other studies have shown that people who feel socially isolated or chronicall­y stressed by work or relationsh­ips are more prone to heart attacks and strokes.

Studies on Japanese immigrants to America found that their heart disease risk multiplies. But those who retain their traditiona­l Japanese culture and strong social bonds are protected: Their heart disease rates do not rise.

Dr Jauhar argues that health authoritie­s should list emotional stress as a key modifiable risk factor for heart disease. But it is much easier to focus on cholestero­l than emotional and social disruption.

According to some studies, doctors give their patients about 11 seconds on average to explain the reasons for their clinical visit before interrupti­ng them.

Since writing the book, Dr Jauhar has a newfound appreciati­on for letting patients talk about the things that are bothering them so he can better understand their emotional lives.

He has also tried his hand at new habits to help reduce stress, like yoga and meditation. He exercises daily now, spends more time with his children, and is better able to relate to his patients since discoverin­g his own heart disease.

“I used to be so wrapped up in the rat race that I was probably putting an inordinate amount of stress on myself,” he said.

“Now I think about how to live a little more healthfull­y, to live in a more relaxed way. I have also bonded more with my patients and their fears about their own hearts.”

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