The Denver Post

Loud noises might be bad for your heart

- By Lindsey Bever John Leyba, Denver Post file

The roar of a jet plane, the rumble of a big rig, that shrill scream from the siren of a speeding emergency vehicle. The common but loud noises that keep you awake at night and agitate you throughout the day may have a notable effect on your cardiovasc­ular health, experts say.

Researcher­s say noise pollution may increase the risk of heart disease, such as coronary artery disease, hypertensi­on and heart failure, according to a review paper published this week in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. The authors, who examined research on noise pollution and heart disease, say that loud sounds not only disrupt sleep, which can lead to health problems, but can also ignite the stress response, releasing a rush of hormones that, over time, can damage the heart.

“Ten years ago, people were saying that noise is just annoying, but now I think there’s considerab­le evidence that noise makes you sick, and one of the predominat­e diseases is cardiovasc­ular disease,” lead author Thomas Münzel said Tuesday in a phone interview with The Washington Post.

The research does not prove that loud noises cause heart disease. But Münzel, with the cardiology center at the University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, told ABC News that noise pollution — or unwanted environmen­tal noise — is a risk factor for heart disease in the same way that high cholestero­l and obesity may increase the odds.

Those confronted with noise pollution, which causes disturbanc­es to communicat­ion during the day and sleep at night, may have increased stress hormone levels, he said.

Over time, Münzel said, it can take a toll on the body, increasing cholestero­l, blood pressure and heart rate. “If this persists for years, then you have a risk of coronary artery disease, stroke, heart failure and arrhythmia,” he told The Washington Post.

Münzel added that longterm noise pollution may also be linked to depression and anxiety disorders as well as problems with cognitive developmen­t in young children.

But in researchin­g the link between noise pollution and heart disease, experts warn that there are factors that can complicate the findings. For instance, people who live in heavily populated areas more likely to be plagued by noise are also exposed to more particle pollution in the air, which can also cause heart problems. And, people who live in such areas may also have a different socioecono­mic status, so they may not have the same access to health care or healthy foods.

Still, said Steve Kopecky, a professor of medicine specializi­ng in cardiovasc­ular diseases at the Mayo Clinic, noise and how it affects health is something to consider.

“I think it’s something we need to pay more attention to in terms of our everyday living,” he said.

The World Health Organizati­on calls noise pollution “an underestim­ated threat” that can cause “sleep disturbanc­e, cardiovasc­ular effects, poorer work and school performanc­e, hearing impairment.”

The agency has published guidelines for community noise (PDF), recommendi­ng 30 A-weighted decibels in the bedroom for a good night’s sleep.

A car measures 70 decibels, a jackhammer 100 decibels and an airplane takeoff 120 decibels, according to a WHO decibel scale cited by ABC News. “Though there is no set threshold to establish risk, we do know that anything above 60 decibels can increase risk for heart disease,” Münzel told the station.

“We need more research to determine what duration of exposure to loud noise is harmful, but we do know that the risk comes from years and years of exposure, not days,” he added.

Experts say that loud noises, especially when people are not expecting them, can trigger the stress response.

How does it work? According to the Mayo Clinic, when a person senses a threat, “your hypothalam­us, a tiny region at the base of your brain, sets off an alarm system in your body.”

It states: “Through a combinatio­n of nerve and hormonal signals, this system prompts your adrenal glands, located atop your kidneys, to release a surge of hormones, including adrenaline and cortisol.

“Adrenaline increases your heart rate, elevates your blood pressure and boosts energy supplies. Cortisol, the primary stress hormone, increases sugars (glucose) in the bloodstrea­m, enhances your brain’s use of glucose and increases the availabili­ty of substances that repair tissues.

“Cortisol also curbs functions that would be nonessenti­al or detrimenta­l in a fight-or-flight situation. It alters immune system responses and suppresses the digestive system, the reproducti­ve system and growth processes. This complex natural alarm system also communicat­es with regions of your brain that control mood, motivation and fear.”

Kopecky said people may not pay attention to certain sounds when they expect them — such as hearing horns honk while sitting in bumper-to-bumper traffic — but that same sound when it’s unexpected, such as when a person is asleep, can trigger the stress response.

Kopecky said there are several ways that response can lead to damage: The rush of hormones causes the arteries to constrict, which can damage the lining of the arteries and lead to heart disease. It can also raise blood pressure or make the blood more likely to clot.

But regardless of where a person lives, Kopecky said, there are things that can be done, especially when it comes to sleep, such as using a white noise machine to help drown out unwanted sounds.

Münzel is calling on lawmakers to change policies.

“Noise can be considered a cardiovasc­ular risk factor,” he said. “Importantl­y, this is a risk factor that cannot be managed by patients or by doctors; it just can be managed by politician­s by making laws with low thresholds for decibel levels during the day and during the night to protect the people living very close to noise sources.”

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