The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Sad results of ‘broken heart’

Health: Research suggests damage from syndrome may be longer lasting

- BY JANE KIRBY

A condition known as “broken heart syndrome” may leave longer lasting damage than previously thought, experts say.

Around 3,000 people a year in the UK suffer from Takotsubo syndrome, which can be triggered by emotional distress, such as the death of a loved one.

Symptoms are similar to a heart attack and the condition, which mostly affects women, is usually diagnosed in hospital.

Until now, it was thought the heart fully recovered from the syndrome, but new research suggests the muscle actually suffers long-term damage.

This could explain why people with the syndrome only tend to have the same life expectancy as those who suffer a heart attack.

The research, funded by the British Heart Foundation, was published in the Journal of the American Society of Echocardio­graphy.

A team from the University of Aberdeen followed 52 Takotsubo patients over the course of four months.

They used ultrasound and cardiac MRI scans to look at how the patients’ hearts were functionin­g.

The results showed that the syndrome permanentl­y affected the heart’s pumping motion, delaying the twisting or ‘wringing’ motion made by the heart during a heartbeat.

The heart’s squeezing motion was also reduced, while parts of the heart muscle suffered scarring, which affected the elasticity of the heart and prevented it from contractin­g properly.

Dr Dana Dawson, reader in cardiovasc­ular medicine

“This disease has much longer lasting effects”

at the University of Aberdeen, who led the research, said: “We used to think people who suffered from Takotsubo cardiomyop­athy would fully recover, without medical interventi­on. Here we’ve shown that this disease has much longer lasting damaging effects on the hearts of those who suffer from it.”

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 ??  ?? EMOTIONAL STRESS: ‘Broken heart syndrome’ has a longer-lasting effect than previously thought
EMOTIONAL STRESS: ‘Broken heart syndrome’ has a longer-lasting effect than previously thought

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