Marysville Appeal-Democrat

On Christmas Eve, Santa delivers presents … and a few extra heart attacks

Study puts holiday in the same category as disasters

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

If you think of the night before Christmas as a time for hot cocoa, cozy fires and Bing Crosby albums, a new discovery by Swedish researcher­s may well break your heart:

The risk of suffering a heart attack spikes on Christmas Eve.

That finding is based on a comprehens­ive database of hospital statistics that includes 283,014 cases of heart attacks over a period of 16 years. It was published this week in the BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal).

The study would appear to put Christmas Eve in the same category as earthquake­s, hurricanes, stock market crashes, wars and high-stakes World Cup soccer matches – after all of these events, scientists have documented that heart attacks are more likely to occur.

On Dec. 24, the risk of a heart attack is 37 percent higher than normal, the researcher­s found. On Christmas itself, the increase in risk dips to 29 percent. Even on Boxing Day, it’s still 21 percent above normal levels.

For the sake of comparison, Mondays are known to be a time of increased heart attack risk. But in Sweden, the risk was only about 10 percent higher on the first day of the workweek.

The BMJ study isn’t the first to report an associatio­n between the holiday season and myocardial mayhem. A 2004 paper in the journal Circulatio­n, for example, found that deaths due to all kinds of heart disease were higher in the U.S. on both Christmas and New Year’s Day.

Previous studies were based on informatio­n from death certificat­es, ambulance records and other kinds of health data. They weren’t able to say when, exactly, a patient’s heart attack began.

A team led by Moman A. Mohammad of Lund University’s Department of Cardiology set out to fill that gap. They relied on a nationwide registry known as SWEDEHEART (short for Swedish Web System for Enhancemen­t and Developmen­t of Evidence-based Care in Heart Disease Evaluated According to Recommende­d Therapies).

The registry includes “all patients with symptoms of an acute coronary syndrome admitted to a coronary care unit or other specialise­d facility in Sweden,” the study authors explained. Each patient’s records indicate when his or her symptoms began, down “to the nearest minute.”

To examine heart attack risk on Christmas Eve, the researcher­s tallied the number of myocardial infarction­s (the medical term for a heart attack) on every Dec. 24 between 1998 and 2013, as well as for the two weeks before and after the holiday, to provide a baseline. On average, Swedes suffered 50.3 heart attacks per day during the baseline period, and 69.1 per day on Dec. 24.

With a little math, they determined that the risk of a heart attack was 37 percent higher on Christmas Eve. They were even able to pinpoint the hour of maximum risk: 10 p.m.

The team repeated the analysis with a range of other holidays. In addition to Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and Boxing Day, they found a significan­tly elevated risk on New Year’s Day (by 20 percent) but not on New Year’s Eve, Easter or Good Friday. (Heart attack risk was 12 percent higher on Midsummer, a Swedish holiday on the eve of the summer solstice that is celebrated with food, drink, song and maypole dancing.)

The researcher­s also checked to see whether Swedes experience­d more heart attacks during the Olympics or major soccer tournament­s, like the FIFA World Cup. They didn’t.

Mohammad and his coauthors said they didn’t know why people would be more prone to heart attacks on Christmas Eve. Previous studies have linked “acute experience­s of anger, anxiety, sadness, grief, and stress” with an elevated risk. Of these, the team wrote that stress is the emotion most likely to come into play on Christmas Eve.

But medical researcher­s shouldn’t be content to simply guess, the authors wrote – they should conduct further studies to see what’s really going on.

“Understand­ing what factors, activities, and emotions precede these myocardial infarction­s and how they differ from myocardial infarction­s experience­d on other days could help develop a strategy to manage and reduce the number of these events,” they wrote.

on time” has taken on a new meaning in recent years with the proliferat­ion of credit cards, layaway has long been the only extended payment option available to low-income families that can’t obtain credit.

Christmas, more than any other holiday, is when it really comes in handy.

For many children, layaway has meant the difference between

waking up on Christmas morning to a shiny new bicycle or the disappoint­ment of learning that Santa, for some reason or another, flew right over their house without stopping.

It is heartwarmi­ng to know that there are wealthy people like media mogul Tyler Perry in the world who still understand that.

Perry recently paid off the layaway accounts at Walmart

for about 1,500 strangers in the Atlanta area. That amounted to about $434,000.

In a video released on Instagram, Perry acknowledg­ed the good deed, after first trying to remain anonymous.

“If you have a layaway ... and it was in there as of 9:30 this morning ... I have paid for all of your layaways for Christmas. So Merry Christmas,” he said.

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 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? Parents and their children line up for photos with Santa Claus at Santa Monica Place in Santa Monica in 2015.
Los Angeles Times/tns Parents and their children line up for photos with Santa Claus at Santa Monica Place in Santa Monica in 2015.

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