National Post

Anger can trigger a heart attack. Here’s why

- Sabrina malhi

The phrase “anger kills” might have a more literal meaning: New research suggests a possible reason frequent anger has been linked to an increased risk of cardiovasc­ular disease. The study, published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Heart Associatio­n, emphasizes the potential health risks associated with intense anger and illuminate­s the influence of negative emotions on our overall well-being.

Funded by the National Institutes of Health, the study involved 280 healthy adults who were randomly assigned to a different eightminut­e task, each designed to elicit feelings of anger, anxiety, sadness or neutrality. Before and after these emotional tasks, researcher­s assessed the participan­ts’ endothelia­l health. Endothelia­l cells, which line the insides of blood vessels, are essential for maintainin­g vessel integrity and are vital for proper circulatio­n and cardiovasc­ular health.

The findings revealed that anger had a significan­t negative impact on endothelia­l function, limiting the blood vessels’ ability to dilate. The response was not as pronounced with anxiety or sadness.

According to Daichi Shimbo, a cardiologi­st and professor of medicine at Columbia University Irving Medical Center and the lead study author, this research marks a step toward understand­ing how different negative emotions particular­ly affect physical health.

“It’s fascinatin­g that anxiety and sadness did not have the same effect as anger, suggesting that the ways in which negative emotions contribute to heart disease differ,” Shimbo said.

The research team chose to study healthy individual­s to avoid the confoundin­g effects of chronic illnesses, such as diabetes, which can compromise vascular function. Shimbo noted that if participan­ts had such conditions, they already could have affected blood vessels and it would be difficult to determine the effect of emotions alone on vascular health.

Brian Choi, a cardiologi­st and professor of medicine and radiology at George Washington University, said findings like these could prompt health-care providers to investigat­e therapies such as anger management to see if they could reduce the risk of cardiovasc­ular disease.

“We often hear of someone suffering a heart attack during a highly distressin­g event. We’ve known that stress from anger can trigger a heart attack, but we didn’t understand why until this study, which elucidates the underlying mechanism,” Choi said.

Shimbo says he wants to delve further into the reasons anger detrimenta­lly affects the heart, considerin­g whether the cause is related to the sympatheti­c nervous response (the body’s alert system) or inflammati­on.

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