The Mail on Sunday

Crease in ear lobe is linked to stroke risk

- By Roger Dobson and Stephen Adams

HAVING diagonal creases across your ear lobes may mean you are at increased risk of suffering a stroke, according to new research.

Scientists who examined 241 people who had experience­d a stroke found more than three-quarters of them had the mark, known as Frank’s sign, on their ears.

It’s thought that clogging of the arteries, which increases the risk of a stroke, also leads to poor blood supply to the ear lobes. This would cause a loss of elasticity and, in turn, the visible creasing.

The Israeli researcher­s who uncovered the findings said doctors should consider adding the ear lobe crease to the list of ‘ classic risk factors for the developmen­t of stroke’.

But other observers think the feature could be little more than a sign of advancing years.

A number of famous people are known to have creased ear lobes, including film director Steven Spielberg, 70, and actor Mel Gibson, 61.

In the study, published in the American Journal of Medicine (AJM), the researcher­s said they found 78 of 88 patients who had suffered a fullblown stroke ( 88 per cent) had creased ear lobes.

That also applied to 112 of 153 (73 per cent) of patients who had experience­d a ‘mini-stroke’ – more formally called a transient ischaemic attack. Previous research has also linked the ear creases with a higher heart attack risk.

In one study of 800 people, 77 per cent of those who had suffered an attack had the crease, compared to 40 per cent of those in a group of non-heart attack victims. Frank’s sign is named after the American doctor Sanders T Frank, who noticed in 1973 that the ear lobe crease was common i n young patients with the heart condition angina. Besides the theory that the creases indicate clogged arteries, another possibilit­y is that they are a sign of accelerate­d ageing.

Creased earlobes are not the only visible indicator of potential health problems. Another sign that a person is at increased risk of heart disease or stroke is a receding hairline or bald patch. That holds t r ue f or both s exes, although it is much more common in men.

A pot belly also indicates a raised risk, even if the person is otherwise quite slim.

Last night, a British stroke expert said the Israeli researcher­s’ study into Frank’s sign should be treated with caution.

Dr Yaqoob Bhat, clinical director for stroke medicine at the Aneurin Bevan University Health Board in South Wales, said: ‘The so-called Frank’s sign in the ear lobes has been recognised as having a possible associatio­n with advanced age, but some studies have shown its associatio­n with cardiovasc­ular risk factors like diabetes, hypertensi­on, i schaemic heart disease, and peripheral vascular disease.

‘This new study suggests an associatio­n with i ncreased risk of stroke, but further studies are needed to assess its importance.’

 ??  ?? DANGER SIGN: The distinctiv­e ear crease that could warn of a stroke
DANGER SIGN: The distinctiv­e ear crease that could warn of a stroke

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